As Nigerians await the outcome of the investigation from the Lagos state Judicial Panel on Restitution for Victims of SARS related abuses and the 20th October shooting at the Lekki
tollgate, some of the victims of the Lekki shooting incident have come out to share sad stories of how they survived the horrifying incident and also how they lost loved ones during the incident.In an
interview with AriseTV, the victims relayed their sad stories.
One of them,
Edwin Augustine, who still has a bullet in his body, recounted how he went for
the protest on that fateful day and was allegedly shot at by the military men
who stormed the tollgate where the unarmed protesters were gathered. He said he
went to the tollgate with his friend.
''I was at
the snooker board that night but I don't know how to play snooker. I was
standing with him while he was playing. I was like let me go and check my phone
that was charging. The lights went off and we were like what is wrong?
The next
thing I heard was shooting everywhere. The guy that was leading me to the
charging point was shot at the side. I received my own on my thigh. Right now
the bullet is still isnide of me. It has not yet been removed. The next day I woke up and saw myself at Ikeja
General Hospital.
The bullet in
me is giving me discomfort and affecting my leg, making it swell everyday.
Sometimes my leg gets stiff.
Mr Tunde
Odeyemi, the father of another victim, recounted how he met his son in the
hospital after the shooting.
I met him
lying down, being treated by the corner of the hospital. He couldn't talk to
me, he couldn't open his eyes. I was surprised to see him in that position.
I had to try
and see the doctor so he can be transferred to Ikeja. They wrote a letter that
he should be transferred that night but they said there was no ambulance. It
was the next day in the night that they brought us to the emergency ward in
Ikeja.
That very
day, they asked us to go do an X-Ray of the brain. When the doctor studied it,
he noticed that that there was blood at the front and back of the brain and he
said that is why he (the son) cannot say anything now and that when they start
giving him drugs, the blood will vanish.
It was about
5 days later that he started talking. He did not get himself well until when
they discharged us from the hospital.'
Mr Adeyemi
said his son was discharged and asked to come back in January to collect a date
for further checkup. He said he took him to his house and has since employed
the service of a nurse who caters for him at home.
Sometimes I
wonder why the government is saying they didn't shoot at us while I am still
having the bullet in my body''
Olufunmi
Aiyedungbe who was also interviewed spoke about her brother, Aiyedungbe Gabriel
Ayoola, who she says died during the protest. A tearful Olufunmi said her
deceased brother was shot in the head.
''I am
speaking on behalf of my brother Aiyedungbe Gabriel Ayoola. He was shot in the
head. We were actually looking for him because he doesn't stay with us so it
was like two days before he passed on that somebody sent this(a message) to me
on whatsapp. They wrote it there that he is at LASUTH and that they are looking
for his family. So we went to LASUTH.
They said he
was unconscious for like two weeks. By the time we got there, he had opened his
eyes and he was moving his hands but he couldn't talk. They were feeding him
through his nose. There was sore all over his body because they did not turn
him for a long time. I think he did not get medical attention. That was what
led to his death eventually''.
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