Different
strokes for different people. This statement aptly describes the scene
of last Thursday’s plane crash in Lagos and Lagos State University
Teaching Hospital, LASUTH, where the corpses of the 13 victims who died
are being kept and the survivors receiving treatment.
It was a drizzling Friday and, as you arrived the morgue, not far from the pathology section, many people were there, waiting to collect the corpses of their loved ones, but you could not decipher which of them were for the victims of the plane accident.
You
began to hear all sorts as things as you mixed with the crowd, from the
absurd to pure comedy. Part of the absurd. The General Manager of a top
private radio station in Lagos was said to be among those who died in
the crash.
Although
somebody quickly countered the claim with a question: What was the
broadcaster’s business with the Agagu family? Akeem, that was the name
they called him. He was said to have died with Tunji Okusanya, the owner
of MIC Undertakers. He was, according to the crowd, Okusanya’s friend.
He
was so nice, even better than Okusanya, somebody in the crowd said.
Why? “He gave money freely. He was much more important to them than
Okusanya, because Okusanya was tight fisted”, the man said.. ”Akutunku e
lona orun”, meaning who cares if he dies. The same man Akeem was the
topic of discussion at the gate of the hospital . Mortuary attendants
and three other uniformed security men likened “Akeem” to Senator Bola
Tinubu, former Lagos State governor.
According
to one of them, Akeem was not different from Tinubu. “He gave freely.
Whenever he came around for collection of bodies, he would give money to
all of us. He was like Tinubu and that is the reason I can never talk
ill about him. And since he (Tinubu) left office I have never voted”.
A
few meters away, a man was lamenting aloud why a benefactor had to die
now especially when he was yet to fulfill his promise to him. “He asked
me to see him yesterday (Thursday), and here he is in the mortuary. How
can this be? This is not really fair”, he said. He continued: “Death,
this is not fair.
It
is not fair to him and not fair to me. How do I start now? I have
relied so much on you (deceased), I have really relied so much on you.
Where do I go from here?”. He broke down in tears Then, the Agagu issue
came up. Somebody had implied that the former governor, through the
plane accident, wanted to take people with him to the grave.
The
expression brought out reactions. One came from one of the relatives of
a victim of the ill-fated plane. At this time, tempers rose to the
point of the bereaved families exchanging blows. And then a lady walked
past and the atmosphere changed especially for four men in their early
30s there.
‘Look
at that lady going, look at her backside’, one of them said to which
another replied. ‘I will give it a trial.. after all, the dead is gone,
those must go on’. Having gone after the lady, he returned with a smile:
“I told you. I have collected her number. My coming here is not in
vain”.
Then
the Lagos State Special Duties Commissioner, Dr. Ahmed Wale, walked
towards the pathology department where forensic analysis, on the bodies
of the plane crash victims that died was being done. Sunday Vanguard
approached him for a chat, and he obliged. I followed him to the office
of Professor John Oladapo Obafunwa, said to be the only forensic
pathologist in Lagos State.
As
we walked to the HOD’s office, an old friend, who claimed to be
residing in Spain, saw me and was thoroughly embarrassed. He turned out
to be one of the mortuary attendants. I asked him to wait while I
conclude with the commissioner, but by the time I returned, he had
bolted; his colleagues could not say his whereabouts.
Within
the pathology block was a conference room where the staff of the NCAA
were attending to the relatives of deceased persons to update them on
what was being done on the bodies. Back to the surgical emergency
section where the survivors were, a consultant doctor there identified
as Mustapha, said the plane crash survivors were in stable condition.
He
would not disclose their names or allow access to them. Back to the
crash site: The staff of Accident and Investigation Bureau, AIB, on
Friday morning, 24 hours after the crash, had condoned off the site, but
one could find personal belongings of the victims there: slippers,
handbag, key holders and the plane wreckage. Two things however bothered
residents of Mafoluku, where the plane came down, regarding the
accident.
The
site was not far from a tank farm. Akinwunmi Olatunde, 32, a resident,
said if the plane had crashed into Mafoluku, the disaster would have
been mind-boggling. “Do you know that the houses in this area are close
to one another? Not only that, a room has as many as six people living
there. If you add it up, you are likely to have 40 people in an
eight-room house.
And
it is like that every where in this area. The accident happened in the
morning, just when people were leaving their houses, so there was the
possibility of people being killed if the plane had crashed here”. For
Michael Okpara, 40, business man, his fear rose with the crash.
According
to him, he got scared each time a plane took off or landed. “That is
just my fear. Each time I hear the sound of a plane taking off or
landing, it is like it will fall on top of our house. I was in my shop
when I heard of the accident, and that is why I ran home.
There
is no doubt, I will look for another accommodation when my rent
expires. When things like this happens, it is more or less a warning for
the wise. Imagine if the plane had crashed around here, what would I be
saying now? I can’t bear it anymore. Now is the right time to move. All
the same, we thank God for his mercies over us”.
For
the tank farm owners, they couldn’t be luckier. Only few of them
volunteered to bare their minds. Jimoh Kareem is one of them. He said he
was grateful to God for sparing the area from the crash, otherwise,
according to him, “Some of us would have been dead.
If
the plane had crashed here, the entire neighbourhood would have gone up
in flames, drivers and motor boys would have been burnt to ashes with
the vehicles and for those who may not be on site, on hearing of the
crash, some of them would probably commit suicide. So the enormity of
the disaster cannot be quantified”.
Source: Vanguard
No comments:
Post a Comment