Agony of a visually impaired woman: Police killed my only remaining son, threatened to shoot me, too
By EVELYN USMAN
•Loses two sons in one year
•Appeals to LASG for help
She stood up from an old chair that made squeaky sound each time she attempted to recline and sat on the bare floor, to prevent the disturbing noise.
She reached for her stick which fell in the process, placed her palms on the top , rested her chin on them before narrating her tales of woe.
Her only surviving son, 14- year-old Mubarak Sanyaolu, was killed by a stray bullet from a team of policemen , last month.
This was the second time in one year that the family would be thrown into grief. First, was the death of its first son, last year.
His death saddled Mubarak, a Senior Secondary School 1 student of District Secondary School, with the responsibility of moving his mother around and helping with the house chores.
In his determination to complement the efforts of his father who is a commercial motorcyclist, he began apprenticeship as a vulcanizer ,not too far from his parents’ abode.
Tragedy
He resumed at the workshop after school , everyday, until fate decided otherwise, on November 3, 2021.
Penultimate day, commercial motorcyclists were protesting the death of one of their own by a policeman , who allegedly shot the deceased, for refusing to part with N100.
When the protest assumed a violent dimension, late Mubarak’s boss, hurriedly closed for the day and directed Mubarak and his colleagues to go home in order to avoid being caught in the web of the protest.
His adherence to that directive turned out to be his greatest undoing.
Narrating how her only surviving son died, the distraught mother said, “Policemen deployed to quell the protest that day, started shooting indiscriminately. A bullet hit Mubarak who was trying to cross the road to come home. He died on the spot.
” Some people brought his corpse home and laid it at our doorstep . He was just 14 years old!
Mubarak had been my only guide since I lost my sight 11 years ago.
“My husband works as a commercial tricycle operator. He leaves home every morning to look for a tricycle to use for commercial purpose before we would eat.
“It was Mubarak who assisted me if I wanted to have my bath, use the toilet or feed.
He would attend to me before going to school, after school and before he left for his place of apprenticeship.
Since his death, I have been bumping into objects whenever I’m going to the bathroom or toilet. I can’t force my husband to stay at home and take care of me. That would worsen the already sorry situation. Besides, I don’t want to go plate in hand begging at bus -stops and streets junctions “.
Seeks justice
The distraught woman said with the help of sympathisers, she visited Meiran Police Station on the day of the incident but was prevented from seeing the Divisional Police Officer.
She alleged that “ policemen at the station threatened to shoot us. Those who took me to the station ran away because of the threat. They waited outside and took me back home.
Last year, I lost my first child after a brief illness. Now, the Police have killed my remaining child. I’m left with nothing! I have no hope again because Mubarak was my only hope. What am I living for?
All I demand is for the policemen that killed my son to be brought to book”.
Silence from Police
Abidemi lamented that since the death of Mubarak, no government official or the Police had deemed it wise to pay her family a condolence visit, let alone to check on how she and her husband were coping”.
At this point, her husband, Olamilekan Sanyanolu walked in sweating. He sat close to his wife, held her hand and explained that he had to leave the garage immediately he heard there was a visitor at home..
Mubarak’s father
Olamilekan said the bullet from the police gun hit the deceased in the stomach.
He recalled: “I was relaxing in a compound nearby when some residents rushed in and asked me to follow them, that they wanted to show me something; they didn’t tell me what it was.
I was led to where Mubarak laid stone dead in the pool of his blood. The sight was too much for me to bear, I passed out. I was later revived.
The Police refused to allow me to take his corpse. They took it into a van and drove off. As I speak, it is yet to be released for burial.
The burden is too much for me. I am faced with the challenge of my visually impaired wife. There is nobody to take care of her while I am out of the house. I didn’t have cause to worry when Mubarak was alive.
The Lagos State Government should come to my aid and assist me financially so that I can take care of my wife. Government should not allow Mubarak to die in vain
Late Mubarak’s boss, Mr. Taofeek Qudri, who also spoke to Crime Guard, recalled with pain the tragic event of that fateful day.
He said, ”I had barely left the place when gunshots started coming from different directions. When I was told that Mubarak had been killed by a stray bullet, I rushed to the spot, shook him , in an attempt to wake him up. But he didn’t. I tried to carry him but the policemen fired teargas canisters which forced me to leave the scene”.
A human right activist,identified simply as Skido, who spoke with Crime Guard, said attempts by a soldier to rush Mubarak for medical aid was rebuffed.
According to Skido, “The bullet hit Mubarak in front of Command Secondary School. One of the soldiers guarding the school tried to save him but the policemen threatened to shoot him if he did. The gunshot tore Mubarak’s stomach open while other people sustained varying degrees of injuries.
I heard that the Divisional Police Officer in charge of Meiran Police Station, called Mubarak’s father and told him to go to the mortuary to collect the remains of his son for burial. He told him that after the burial , he (bereaved father) should come for negotiations. When the grieving father refused to go, the DPO started threatening him and his wife.
All the family wants is for the policeman that killed its son to be punished. We have also sent a petition to the Lagos State Police Command on our demand for justice for late Mubarak.”
He also called on the State government to come to the aid of the bereaved couple by ensuring they got justice.
When contacted, the Lagos State Police Public Relations Officer Mr. Adekunle Ajisebutu, a Chief Superintendent of Police said the matter had been transferred to the State Criminal Intelligence and Investigation Department SCIID, Yaba, Lagos.
He assured that the command would make a public statement at the end of its investigation into the tragic end of Mubarak. (Adopted from Saturday Vanguard)
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