Killer cop: Victim’s daughter develops seizure after witnessing mother’s killing
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Kunle Falayi
Three months after a tragic incident
left 12-year-old Mary Udoh and her three siblings (aged nine, seven and
12 months) motherless, and almost made them orphans, life has been a
downward spiral of torment for the children.
Saturday PUNCH tracked down the
children three months after their mother, Comfort and father, Sunday,
were shot by a police corporal, Musefiu Aremu of the Isheri Oshun Police
Division, Ijegun, Lagos, and learnt that a lot has changed for the
worse in the lives of the children.
Speaking with difficulties through a
yet-to-heal jaw wound he sustained during the tragic incident, Sunday
told our correspondent that after witnessing the traumatic incident,
Mary, who is his oldest child, has been having seizures, which doctors
have diagnosed as induced by the traumatic incident she witnessed.
Recollecting the events of that tragic day, Sunday, a tricycle (Keke)
rider, said he was on his way back from church with his wife and four
children in his tricycle when he was stopped by Aremu, who demanded
N2,000 as bribe.
Sunday said he explained to the policeman he did not have money to pay him.
During an ensuing argument, Aremu cocked
his rifle and shot directly at Sunday, who had insisted he did nothing
wrong. The bullet passed through his arm and tore his jaw to shreds. But
that wasn’t the worst.
Saturday PUNCH learnt that as
the bullet exited his jaw, it hit Comfort on one side of the head and
exited on the other side, killing her immediately.
All these happened in the presence of the couple’s four children.
“As I fell from my tricycle, I did not
really know what had happened until my children started screaming and
shouting that their mother was dying.
“I rushed to my wife even though I was
bleeding heavily from my arm and jaw. I held her head and realised there
was nothing anybody could do for her at that point.
“I ran towards the policeman who shot us
and he had joined his friends. They said if I came closer they would
shoot me again. They jumped into their van and sped off.”
The events of that day seemed to have
become too traumatic for Mary, whom Sunday said has been finding it
difficult to express herself apart from the seizures, which the shock
triggered.
Doctors said she would require
specialised care and therapy so that the problem does not become
permanent, an issue that has thrown the father into additional turmoil.
“I have incurred a lot of debts and I
don’t know how to go about the treatment for my daughter at the moment.
Her convulsion is a serious concern for me right now. I am helpless and
still receiving treatment. I still cannot use my right arm, which was
hit by the bullet.
“I have not been able to eat anything because my jaw has not completely healed. I struggle to swallow food.”
Saturday PUNCH learnt that the
corpse of Sunday’s wife still lies in the Mainland Hospital mortuary in
Yaba, Lagos three months after the incident.
He told our correspondent that even
though the police had told him to come for it anytime he is ready; he is
not yet strong enough to start the burial arrangement.
‘My wife’s family thought I was dead’
When our correspondent spoke with him, Sunday said he had just travelled to Akwa Ibom to see his wife’s family.
“They were shocked when they saw me.
They said the news they got was that I died the day after my wife died.
They really felt so sorry for me,” he said.
Taking care of himself and his four
children has been a daily battle for Sunday, who said he had to resort
to employing a maid to take care of the children in his absence with the
meagre money he and his children survive on.
He also explained that there are no
other family members who could take his children in because they have
their own burdens as well.
“My little baby cries more than usual
now in the middle of the night. Sometimes, I don’t know what to do.
Anytime he senses that the mother is not around, the cry starts again.
He was still breast feeding when my wife was killed. All I can do is
feed her with pap only anytime I suspect he is hungry,” he said.
“I don’t want my children and me to be a
burden to anybody, that was why I had to take them from my elder sister
who took them in temporarily. I don’t have a choice than to rely on the
maid who comes around to take care of them when I am not at home.
“Apart from my oldest child who is no
longer like she was before now, the other children have not shown any
other obvious signs of how the trauma has affected them apart from the
fact that they miss their mother.”
Gloomy Yuletide
The Yuletide season has been
particularly difficult for Sunday and his children. He explained that
this is the first time the children had a taste of the difficult life
they have been thrust into.
Sunday said, “For instance, my wife
would normally take them to the hairdresser’s to make beautiful hair for
them during Christmas. She would buy them beautiful clothes. She was
the kind of woman, who would gladly do these things if I did not have
enough money. For the 13 years we were married, my wife never had any
problem with sharing my burden.
“My children were expecting all these
things during this festive period. But how can I do these things with
all the difficulties I am passing through? It is a festive period for
some people, for me, it is a period of mourning.”
Police scholarship for deceased’s children
Two weeks ago, the Inspector-General of
Police, Mr. Solomon Arase, signed a letter offering Sunday’s children
scholarship as part of the Nigeria Police’s Scholarship Scheme.
But Sunday said there are other promises
the Lagos State Commissioner of Police, Mr. Fatai Owoseni, and the IGP
had made to him verbally, which he would like to see in writing.
He said Owoseni called him to his office
to sympathise on his loss and the police IG also called him on the
phone over the incident.
“They promised some monetary
compensation, befitting burial for my wife and accommodation for us. I
would like these to be put in writing so that if there is a change in
authority, I would have something to present. The balance of the cost of
my treatment, which I had to borrow money for has not been paid for,”
he said.
It would be recalled that on September
16, 2015, Sunday had reported to the Area Commander of Idimu, Lagos
soaked in his own blood after the incident, which took place around
9.30pm.
The area commander detained the DPO of
the Isheri Oshun Division along with the men on patrol when the
trigger-happy police corporal (Aremu) killed Comfort.
Aremu, who has since been summarily
discharged from the police force, is currently being tried before an
Ebute-Metta Chief Magistrate’s Court in Lagos.
A’ Ibom, company to the rescue
Meanwhile, the Akwa Ibom State Governor,
Udom Emmanuel, has donated an undisclosed amount of money to the Udom
family while a construction Firm, Nigerpet Structures also donated the
sum of N2m as part of its corporate social responsibility.
Presenting the state government’s
package in Uyo, the governor, who was represented by the Special
Assistant on Legal Services, Mr. Andem Andem, said that the life of
every Akwa Ibom person wherever they may be means more to his
administration and that he would always ensure their well-being.
Saturday PUNCH learnt that the
Managing Director of Nigerpet, Mr. Terry Follet, made the presentation
at the headquarters of the company, saying the money was to aid the
survival of the bereaved family after the loss of Comfort.
Sunday, who was full of thanks to the
company and the Akwa Ibom State Government, also appreciated the Human
Rights Activist, Dr. Joe Okei-Odumaki, who took up his case.
It was learnt that Sunday would appear
before committee of the House of Representatives later in January in
connection with an inquiry into the incident that claimed the life of
his wife.
According to Sunday, Okei-Odumakin had
approached both the Lagos State House of Assembly and the House of
Representatives, demanding justice on his case.
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