On
Wednesday, October 16, a day after Muslim folks celebrated Sallah, tragedy
struck at Oniwaya Junction, Agege, Lagos, as a high tension cable electrocuted
four people in the area.
A woman, identified as
Mrs. Oluwajedalo but popularly called Iya Fathia, survived the electrocution
but lost his three-year-old son, Ayomide, who ran towards her and embraced her
as electric shock overtook her.
The incident was still a
hot topic of discussion when Saturday PUNCH visited the area on Tuesday as some
people were seen discussing it in the front of house Number 88, Oniwaya Road,
where the incident occurred.
There is a transformer
located at Oniwaya Junction. House no 88 is just two houses away from the
transformer.
A resident of the house,
Mr. James Eboh, promptly pointed to a paper on a wall, a poster of the four
victims of the electrocution – Ayomide Oluwajedalo (3), Sunday Hisaun (25),
Samson Akinrinsoye (25) and Matthew (37).
Eboh shook his head and
said the three-year-old victim should not have died.
He said, “The incident
occurred around 8pm. There was a spark on the transformer over there. As we
heard the spark, everybody scampered for safety because it had happened before.
“A cable detached from
the transformer as the spark went off. It fell on this shop here (in the front
of No 88). Iya Fathia moved towards the shop to warn the shop owner, who was
inside at the time. But she stepped on a metal on which the shop was built.
“As the electric shock
went through her body, she was shaking violently. Ayomide who sighted her
mother at the entrance of the house, ran towards her and embraced her. He died
on the spot. But his mother survived.
“I am the closest friend
of Iya Fathia (Ayomide’s mother) in this house. I was one of those who took her
to a hospital in Egbeda. It is just sad because the woman is not sane at the
moment.”
Asked how Mrs.
Oluwajedalo could be located, Eboh said her family had requested for her
discharge at the hospital in Egbeda where she was undergoing treatment and
taken her to Ijebu-Ode.
“The woman was still in
shock and she did not seem to be improving. The family had spent a lot on her
treatment. They decided to move her to Ijebu-Ode because the cost was becoming
unbearable for them. The last time I spoke with her in Egbeda, she was not
sounding normal. She was only saying, ‘My son is not dead! My son is okay! My
son is not dead,” Eboh said.
He explained that the
young victim had been buried at the Jafojo Cemetery.
Abiola Oladimeji, who was
in his shop when the high tension cable fell on it, said he survived by divine
grace.
“I was told Iya Fathia
was coming to alert us when she was electrocuted. It is just unfortunate,” he
said.
It was a wonder that
Oladimeji was not electrocuted because his shop on which the cable fell is a
moveable metal container.
“I was lucky because there were wooden panels inside the shop. If not because of that, I would not be standing here talking to you today,” the young man said.
“I was lucky because there were wooden panels inside the shop. If not because of that, I would not be standing here talking to you today,” the young man said.
Residents of Oniwaya
could not provide any information on where Matthew and Hisaun lived before
their death. But they gave direction to a house where Akinrinsoye lived which
is not far from where he died.
A resident of the house
told Saturday PUNCH that his relations had taken his body from the mortuary to
his hometown.
“He was not married; he
was living alone here. The day he died, he said he was going to the junction to
eat in a canteen there,” the resident said.
Information gathered in
the area where the incident occurred indicated that such electrocution had
taken place in the same spot on several occasions in the last three years.
A petty trader, whose
shop faces the ‘transformer of death’ directly, said about the middle of last
year, there was a spark on the transformer.
The man who preferred to
be called just Alhaji, said, “It was just like this one too. A cable fell down
as the spark occurred. It fell on a policeman. The power of the electric
current flung the man into the gutter there and he died instantly.
“There was also a time a
motorcycle was parked close to the transformer. A cable sparked and fell on it.
It burnt the machine completely. Luckily, nobody was on the motorcycle that
day.”
Oladimeji, who had
earlier spoken with our correspondent, corroborated this as well. He said he
could recall at least three previous incidents in the same place.
He stated, “Just this
time last year, a policeman who was holding a gun, was electrocuted right here.
There was a time a motorcycle parked close to the transformer was burnt.
“Apart from that, there
was also another incident involving a motorcycle. I cannot really recall if it
was early last year or the year before. A rider and a passenger were passing by
when a cable sparked and fell on them. They were both electrocuted.
“Why is it that officials
of the Power Holding Company of Nigeria cannot do something about this issue?
Are they only concerned about collecting money? They are aware because they
always come here after each incident to remove the cables.”
When Saturday PUNCH got
to the scene on Tuesday, the cable that caused the electrocution had been
removed.
It is common to see high
tension cables hanging precariously over residential areas in Lagos.
But residents of Oniwaya
said the fact that there had been incidents of electrocution in the same place
in the past should have been a reason for PHCN to put in place measures that
could protect residents if a spark occurs.
The residents were angry
and on the night the incident occurred, a number of youths stormed the palace
of the Olu of Agege, Oba Oyedeji Isiba.
Saturday PUNCH visited
the Olu’s palace to seek an audience with the king on Tuesday but an official,
who had taken our correspondent’s identity card inside, came back later and
said, “Kabiyesi is not available for comments.”
PHCN Public Affairs
Manager for the Ikeja Zone, Mr. Pekun Adeyanju, told Saturday PUNCH over the
phone that he just resumed from leave.
When asked if he got any
report in the past about electrocution in the area, he said, “It may be speculation
that there had been electrocution in the area before but I will find out about
it.”
But Senior Marketing
Manager, Akowonjo Business Unit of PHCN, Mr. Henry Adelakun, later told our
correspondent that the officials went to the scene of the electrocution the day
it happened but protesting youths did not allow them to have access to the
area.
He said, “Even community
leaders who have my number were already calling to caution us to stay away
because of the area boys in the area. But on Friday, two days after the
incident, the community leaders came to our office and we promised to remove
and replace 3,000 metres of cable with new aluminium conductors.
“We later went to the
area that Friday and met with the residents in company with our general
manager. When we were informed that one of the victims survived but was in
critical condition, the GM indicated that PHCN will do something for the woman,
but in the interim, we had to quickly send some money to her from personal
pockets.
“It is unfortunate this
happened. We have started the removal of the old cables since Monday and should
complete the process by Friday (yesterday)”
However, Saturday PUNCH
visited the area on Wednesday and noticed that some of the cables had been
removed.
Residents also said they
had seen officials of the PHCN at work in the area
Source: Punch
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