
Audio By Carbonatix
Rescuers are searching for survivors in the wreckage of a 22-storey high-rise block that collapsed under construction in Nigeria's largest city, Lagos.
At least five people have died and dozens are missing.
As they worked through the night, rescue workers and some locals scoured through a mound of rubble and twisted metal. Four survivors have been pulled from the wreckage.
The partially built block of luxury apartments came down on Monday.
What caused the collapse and exactly how many people are trapped under the rubble remains unclear.
In the meantime, local authorities have ordered an investigation into the collapse and pledged to make the final report public.

Femi Adesina, a special advisor to President Muhammadu Buhari, said the president "commiserates with families who have lost loved ones".
He added that the president had urged the authorities to step up their rescue efforts.
The building came down at around 14:45 local time (13:45 GMT) in the upmarket district of Ikoyi.
It was part of a complex named 360 Degrees Towers, which was intended to house luxury apartments, townhouses and penthouses, according to the development's website, which has since been taken offline.
The housing scheme is being developed by Fourscore Homes Limited, which has a portfolio of projects in the UK, US, South Africa, and other areas of Nigeria.
Construction worker Eric Tetteh, 41, told the Associated Press that his teams had been waiting for an excavator to arrive at the site when the building suddenly fell.
"Me and my brother, we escaped, but more people are there - more than 100 people," he said.
A witness who was working in an office building opposite the site told the BBC's Outside Source programme that he heard a sound, looked out of his window, and "saw the building literally going down floor by floor."
Local authorities have put an emergency rescue plan into place, and local officials have visited the site.
But according to AP, Lagos' deputy governor Femi Hamzat was met by crowds of angry people who accused authorities of not starting rescue efforts soon enough.
Some reports say the building, which had more than 20 storeys, was several floors higher than originally intended.

There have been several building collapses in Lagos in recent years.
In 2019, 10 people died after a school collapsed in the commercial hub.
And in 2014, a six-storey building fell during a service by a celebrity televangelist, killing 116 people.
Building standards have often been criticised and Lagos state authorities recently launched a new scheme to improve certification.

Latest Stories
-
Up to 90% of children with sickle cell risk early death without timely care — Dr Bankas warns
7 minutes -
Haruna Iddrisu empowers GES to clamp down on post-WASSCE celebrations in schools
12 minutes -
NACOC arrests three in Volta Region cannabis production and storage raid
22 minutes -
PAC Vice Chair raises alarm over stalled corruption prosecutions, calls for stronger enforcement
25 minutes -
Compassion International graduates urged to avoid deviant behaviour as they transition to independent life
39 minutes -
GES to set up committee to regulate celebrations on SHS campuses
44 minutes -
School environment is for learning, not post-WASSCE celebrations – Haruna Iddrisu
46 minutes -
School heads risk removal over extravagant student celebrations GES warns
51 minutes -
Gov’t moves to tackle student misconduct as education minister announces national forum
54 minutes -
Haruna Iddrisu extends ban on lavish school celebrations to all schools in Ghana
56 minutes -
Keir Starmer resigns as prime minister and leader of Labour Party
58 minutes -
From London to Accra: The UK-Ghana growth partnership in action
1 hour -
Six dead, 34 rescued in multiple road crashes across Volta Region on Sunday
1 hour -
NCPTA’s Deafening Silence: How parental failure, moral decay and social media excesses are turning Ghana’s schools into theatres of indiscipline
2 hours -
Plastic pollution begins at design stage not gutters expert calls for producer responsibility
2 hours