Thirty-one year-old Tochi,
a graduate of the Benue State University, had been on dialysis for the past
three years.
The chance of survival of a
patient who is suffering from a kidney disease, Tochi Mbonu, now hangs by a
thread after she became deaf due to the delay in a kidney transplant operation.
Her mother, Ndidi, told our
correspondent on the telephone that she and Tochi were stranded in India, where
they had hoped to carry out the operation.
She explained that a
non-governmental organisation, Dignity for the Helpless Foundation, which
promised to raise N11m for the operation, disappointed them.
She said to make ends meet,
she resorted to selling beans cake (moin-moin) in India to raise money for her
daughter’s dialysis, until the foundation would have a change of heart.
She added that her daughter
had gone deaf due to a side effect of the dialysis.
She said, “My daughter has
been down with kidney failure for the past three years. She spent one year in
Nigeria and we have been together in India for two years now.
“A friend introduced us to
the NGO, headed by Pastor Samuel Brown.
He came with his team to interview us in our house. We said we needed
money to get Tochi to India for the transplant operation and we both reached an
agreement to raise N11m.
“He said he would publish
it in newspapers and get broadcast stations involved as well. A broadcast media
raised the funds with which we travelled.
“Before we came here
(India), he told me we would open a joint account so that I would know how
money was coming in. But he didn’t open any joint account. Instead, he opened a
personal account. When I asked him why, he said it was a last minute change by
his organisation to reduce conflict over the money.
“For the past two years, he
has only given me N1.4m. He sent N30,000 every two weeks. Now, Tochi is deaf
because of too much dialysis. I don’t have money again. I am a widow. I have
spent all I have. I now sell moin-moin so Tochi can survive. Instead of three
times dialysis, we can only do two per week.”
Tochi, who chatted with our
correspondent via a social media application, Whatsapp, said her problem started
sometime in 2014 when she had a fever and went to a pharmacy to get a drug.
She said she never knew
that she was given a wrong drug, which affected her body system.
“On a particular Friday, my mum sent me to a
bank to withdraw some money and there was a queue. I had to wait for my turn. I
did not know how I found myself at the security post. When I asked what
happened, they said I passed out.
“I later gave them a
neighbour’s phone number, who came to pick me. When we got home, the neighbour
told my mum what happened to me.
“I went to the room to
relax; I did not know how I got to the hospital where I was unconscious for
three days. When I woke up and asked my mum what happened to me, she said I
collapsed again. I was told I had no blood and I had already taken three pints
of blood. After some treatment, the doctor called my mum and said it seemed I
have a kidney failure,” she added.
She explained that a test
at a military hospital in Yaba, Lagos State, confirmed the doctor’s suspicion
and also showed that both kidneys were affected.
After being on dialysis at
Clinix Healthcare, Ilupeju, she said an Indian nurse recommended a kidney
transplant, adding that her family was introduced to Brown’s NGO along the
line.
“We appealed for funds
through social media, radio stations, TV stations, my secondary school friends
and other well wishers, including the governor of Anambra State in 2015.
“We campaigned for N11m.
Mr. Brown said he would give me N6m out of the money. For two years now, it’s
only N1,440,000 that he has given us.
“When I got to India, I had
a lot of complications. They realised I was given wrong drugs. My mum has been
waiting patiently for over six months that Mr. Brown promised to give us the
remaining balance for my transplant. He has failed to give us the money and I
don’t know what to do. He is not calling us again,” she said.
Tochi, who appealed to
Nigerians for help, said she was in a desperate need for the transplant to
avert further complications after losing her sense of hearing.
When contacted, Brown said
he didn’t know the balance in the account, saying he would need to contact his
bank for details.
He said, “We have not
reached N11.5m. To know the amount we have raised, I will need to go to the
bank tomorrow (Monday). For now, I can’t give it to you. We were trying to
raise the money to ensure that the operation was carried out. At a point, I
started having issues with the foundation and I stopped it. When I called her,
she said she cannot ascertain anything until I raise the money. So, when I
tried to raise the money through a programme by the foundation, it failed to hold.
I told her to give me this month, I will get back to her and the operation will
be carried out.”
When our correspondent
asked to know how much he last saw in the account, he said the money was not up
to N3m.
He said he was not the sole
signatory to the account, adding that he needed to call another member of the
foundation to go with him to the bank.

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