I Was Dragged On The Floor After Asking SARS Men For My Arrested Son – Widow Paralysed By Stroke After Police brutality
It was a plaintive call at noon on Friday. The
caller was 13-year-old David Adeojo. The voice was clearly of a young boy in
distress. When he narrated the reason for his calling, it was apparent the boy
wanted help; someone to intervene in the case of his grandmother languishing at
the medical emergency ward of the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital.
“My grandmother and I went to SARS (State Anti-Robbery
Squad) yesterday (Thursday) because she was afraid they had killed my uncle who
was arrested four months ago. They shouted at her and dragged her out. But
later that day, she slumped and became paralysed,” the boy said on the phone.
Our correspondent visited the ward where 55-year-old
widow and evangelist, Bose Bajulaye, was receiving drip at LASUTH soon after,
and her physical condition told a lot about the suffering the woman was going
through.
Her physical appearance looked like that of a 90-year-old
woman even though she is just 55.
She rambled; unable to focus on who it was that had
entered the ward. An activist, Mr. Darlington Ajitemisa, whom she had initially
contacted when the issue of his “missing-in-custody” son came up, took a moment
to rouse her.
When Bajulaye eventually resettled to explain her
plight, each word came out of her mouth with tremendous effort and pain.
“Four months ago, my son was arrested and taken to the
Ojodu Police Division, Lagos on the allegation that he stole a tricycle and
sold it,” she began.
Each sentence took minutes for the ailing woman to
complete as she narrated events leading to her present state to this
correspondent but she eventually explained that her son, 33-year-old Joseph,
indeed stole the tricycle.
“I was told that he had struck up a short friendship
with the owner of the tricycle. But on that particular day, four months ago,
the man said my son was to help him to go and purchase noodles. But in the
process, my son took his tricycle away.
“My son is very rascally but he had never stolen
before. So, it was strange to me. I thought the man was just lying. But when I
confronted my son, he said he indeed stole the tricycle. I slapped him and
asked what he did with it. He said he sold it for N150,000 and used the money
to rent an apartment. But the complainant said he bought the tricycle for
N410,000
“I begged the police and the complainant to allow me to
pay back the money monthly but the owner of the tricycle disagreed. He said he
wanted his money once. I had to visit the apartment which my son rented in
Igando area of Lagos.”
Bajulaye, who said she was a caterer until she stopped
working and chose to preach the gospel three years ago, met with the estate
agent from whom his son rented the apartment.
According to her, the agent confirmed that his son paid
N150,000. She said he was sympathetic and promised to return the money as soon
as he was able to rent out the apartment to another accommodation seeker.
The widow said, “I went back to the Ojodu Police
Division not long after that and they told me that the complainant had reported
at SARS headquarters in Ikeja and that the officers from there had taken my
son.
“I went to the SARS office and I was warned never to
come back and look for him. How would I not look for my son even if he stole
something. I begged them but they ordered me out.
“I contacted a lawyer for help but I noticed shortly
after that the lawyer refused to pick my call again. I contacted another lawyer
but the lawyer too said he could no longer handle the case because SARS men
threatened him.
“I went to the agent for the refund but he said SARS
men had come to collect N160,000 from him. He said he added N10,000 to the
N150,000, which he gave to them. But when I went to the SARS office, I was told
never to return there. I asked for my son and nobody gave any answer. That was
few weeks ago.”
She said a lawyer who is currently handling her case
could not confirm if her son was still alive or not.
Bajulaye said when she went to SARS again on Thursday,
two officers named Idoko and Baba Ngana, who were aware of the case, threatened
her and asked some policemen to drag her on the floor out of the premises.
She was in pain after her treatment at the hand of the
SARS men. But the widow was desperate. She had not seen her son since he was
reportedly taken to SARS four months ago.
“I feared he might have been killed,” she said.
Ajitemisa (activist) later advised her to report the
case to the Commissioner of Police, Mr. Umar Manko.
When she got to the police headquarters in Ikeja, a
police officer followed her to the SARS office. She said Idoko and Baba Ngana
were furious at her. They asked her to stay outside as the policewoman from the
headquarters sort out the issue.
But while she stood outside, she slumped.
Her 13-year-old grandson, who called this
correspondent, narrated the incident.
“While we were standing outside, mama said she was
becoming very tired and could not see properly. She then sat on the floor. But
as she sat she fainted. Some people poured water on her but when she woke up,
she could no longer stand on her own and some policemen took her to LASUTH,” he
said.
At the moment, Bajulaye has no money for treatment as
the policemen who dropped her off at the hospital made no provision for her
treatment.
“Idoko was one of the people who brought me here. But
he lied to the nurses that I only came to SARS to report a case and slumped in
the process,” she told Saturday PUNCH.
A nurse, who was sympathetic about Bajulaye’s case was
blunt when she explained that there was no way Bajulaye could be given proper
treatment apart from the drip she was on because there was no money.
“She has partial stroke and her blood pressure is
alarmingly high,” the nurse, who did not want to be named, said.
The reality is grim for Bajulaye. She has a stroke with
no medication coupled with the psychological torment that her only son could be
dead without any explanation.
But questions persist; like what has happened to
Bajulaye’s son? But the SARS commandant in the state, Mr. Abba Kyari, could not
be reached on Friday as a call placed to his mobile phone indicated his line
was not available.
However, after this correspondent spoke with the police
spokersperson, Ngozi Braide, she contacted the officer in charge, SARS. She was
to later relate the report she got from the O/C SARS.
“The version I got from SARS is different from what the
woman told you totally. What I was told was that she was accompanied to SARS by
the Deputy Commissioner of Police, Administration. but after a thorough check,
there was no record that the son was ever brought there. I was told she fainted
after receiving the news and the police took her to the hospital,” Braide said.
She explained that Bajulaye could not have been
brutalised as she claimed “since she committed no crime.”
“If she needs help, she can come to me to see how we
can help about her case,” Braide said.
Ajitemisa, however, expressed reservation about the
whereabouts of Joseph. The activist said there was no indication yet that
Bajulaye’s son had been killed or not.
“The police should expect a massive demonstration from
concerned people of the state if they do not produce the young man. Killing of
suspects is a massive issue with SARS,” he said.
Punch
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