One of the most painful thing a mother could experience is losing a child not to talk of children. Forty-years-old Chinwike Mosolo and his wife, Gloria, 36, last Thursday’s tragedy that claimed their third child, Izuchukwu, would remain a bitter occurrence.
The
eight-year-old, Izuchukwu, died when a surging flood from behind the school of
Nursing, Nkpor in the Idemili North Local Government Area of Anambra State,
swept his feet and flushed him into deep erosion.
The boy
was said to be returning home while it was raining, together with his mother
when the incident happened. His corpse was later found the following day at
about one kilometre away from where he plunged the previous night, with one of
his hands cut off. This was after futile rescue efforts by some youths in the
community.
More
casualties were averted when the victim’s mother, with a baby strapped to her
back, attempted to jump into the gully to search for her child. People in the
neighbourhood prevented her. Prior to that incident, flooding in the area was
said to have claimed other lives including two older siblings of the latest
victim.
While some
members of the community blamed the state government for allowing the gully to
expand from a minor pothole to a big gully over the years, others said the boy
would not have died if the mother was more careful.
At the residence on Akundiriwa Street,
Nkpor, near Onitsha, Mosolo said that life had been cruel to him and his wife
because they couldn’t understand why they had to lose three kids in the same
way.
Mosolo, a
tyre repairer, who hails from Ezeagu LGA of Ebonyi State, said his wife
attempted suicide twice after they returned from where they went to bury their
son who was the latest victim of the flooding. He, however, noted that she was
timely rescued on both occasions by neighbours who co-incidentally arrived at
the scene promptly.
He said
that the situation made him stay at home more and watch over his wife and the
surviving child.
Speaking
amid tears, Mosolo lamented that out of four children, he was now left with
only one child.
He said,
“Izuchukwu and his mother, who is a tailor, were returning from the shop that
evening while it was raining. As they approached the gully, he quickly freed
his hand from the grip of his mother and started running towards the gully
while the mother ran after him. It led to the loosening of the wrapped used to
back the baby.
“It is
cruel losing three children to flooding. The mother wanted to grab him but also
had to save the child who was nearly on the ground. At that moment, Izuchukwu
had approached the gully and in an attempt to jump was swept by the surging
flood and he plunged into the erosion. We buried him at our hometown in Ebonyi
State on Monday. We returned on Wednesday.
“I don’t
know why my late son had to loosen from the grip of the mother and started
running to where he met his death. Well, I thank God for everything. He alone
knows why things had to turn out that way.”
He blamed
successive governments in the state for the calamities that had befallen his
family, saying that abandonment of the road turned what used to be “ordinary
potholes” into big gullies.
He pointed
out that since he started living in the community over the last 20 years ago,
only the regime of a former governor of the state, Dr Chris Ngige, who is now
the minister of labour, carried out some works on that road.
He called
on the governor, Chukwuma Soludo, to consider the lives lost to the gully and
look into the situation to alleviate the sufferings of the people.
Contacted, the state police spokesman, Tochukwu Ikenga, said he was not aware of the incident as the case was not brought to the attention of the police, Ikenga however advised parents of the victim to lodge a formal complaint at the nearest police station for investigation to be carried out.
Asked why
he didn’t report the incident to the police, Mosolo said, “I felt there was no
need to make any complaint at the police station as doing so will not bring my
son back to life. All I need is for the authorities to do the needful by fixing
the road. My wife has been crying and remained inconsolable since we returned
from where we went to bury my son. I have closed my shop till further notice to
avoid her attempting suicide. I don’t know when this will end.”
The
bereaved mother, Gloria, who was still in a troubled state said that the
scenario that played out between her and her late son was like a film and still
remained a mystery to her.
Wondering
how her son managed to break away from her grip on the night of the incident,
Gloria said the boy would have been alive if he listened to his calls while he
was running towards the erosion area.
She said the same fate befell two of her other children as they also plunged into the gully during rainfall on their way from school.
She stated, “The same thing happened to two of my other children when they were returning from school some years back. It is so sad. Please, I can’t talk about it anymore because doing so breaks my heart.
“My son Izuchukwu was everything to me since we lost two other of his older siblings. He told me he wanted to be a medical doctor and we assured him that we were going to help him fulfill his dream. But look at what has happened. He died without fulfilling his dream.’’
Gloria also lamented that her means of livelihood was threatened as the shop, where she does tailoring, was also affected by erosion.
She added that there was not enough money with them to rent another shop at the moment, stating that her baby who fell on the night she pursued Izuchukwu when he headed for the gully got injured.
She stated, “I am still in serious pain and shock at the moment. Even when I recover, there may not be anything to fall back on for now as floods entered my shop and destroyed my sewing machines at the time we went to bury our son. My husband’s vulcanising work is also not thriving. We plead with kind-hearted individuals to come to our aid. We are passing through a traumatic period and need help. We hope that society will help give us a sense of belonging. The classmates of Izuchukwu came to commiserate with us after we returned home from where we went to bury him.’’
A community member and a former Chairman of the Nigerian Bar Association, Idemili branch, Mr Samuel Chukwukelu, noted that past governments in the state abandoned the community in the area of road rehabilitation.
Chukwukelu said the contractor awarded the road project from Our Ladies road through Uke Street to Attah Road linking Nkpor/Umuoji Road, abandoned the project half way at the erosion prone area, where the incident happened.
The
abandonment of the area, he said, widened the erosion site and deepened by the
surging floods and now being converted into a dump by the residents.
“The death
of the boy was unwarranted and unfortunate. If past governments had done the
needful, this would not have occurred,” he said.
In his reaction to the incident, the Press
Secretary to the state governor, Christian Aburime, acknowledged the poor state
of the road, but said that the state government had declared a “state of
emergency” on the road and that work would commence after the rains.
He said,
“We are moving to the next stage of making Anambra a livable and prosperous
smart mega city by confronting head-on the infrastructural decay. The road
infrastructure in our state is in such a deplorable situation that the governor
has declared a state of emergency on the road.”
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