A taxi driver, Femi Ajibola, will never forget July 1,
2012 in a hurry. At about 5.30 pm on that day, he received a phone call from a
young woman in the Lekki area of Lagos and had quickly answered the subsequent
invitation to pick her up.
“The lady introduced her as Susie. She called me to come
and pick her and her friend. They told me to come pick them up at Mobolaji
Estate near Lekki Second Roundabout. Later, I took them to a hotel at Lekki
Phase I to meet one of their friends.
“From there we left for Beni Apartment in Victoria
Island. They said that I should wait for them and promised to be back soon. Not
long afterwards, one of the girls began to scream as she was coming towards my
car. Behind her, I saw David Adeleke (Davido) and four of his bouncers.
“The girl was
running towards me. I think they men had assaulted her. She said I should open
the door for her so that she would enter. I opened the door for her; as she was
about to enter the car, Davido caught up with her and slapped her face,”
Ajibola said.
In a bid to save the girl from further assault, Ajibola
switched on the engine of his cab and was about to drive off when the youthful
singer suddenly dealt him a slap.
The cabbie said, “He left the girl and faced me. He said
I was the one that brought the girls, that I am their boyfriend. He knocked my
face against the steering wheel of the cab. This made blood begin to come out
from my ear drums. He seized my car keys and in the process, injured me.
“Before I knew what was going on, his four bouncers began
to beat me up. They beat me severely and took my car keys from me and chased me
away. This happened around 11 pm. I went to report the matter at the Bar Beach
Police Station, which was the nearest one. I was asked to come back the next
morning to report the case.”
Unfortunately, Ajibola had just taken delivery of the
vehicle he was using for his transport business and had not paid the dealer in
full before the incident. He said that the balance of N100,000 was in the car
before the incident had happened. In the whole confusion, he could not pick the
money as he was ordered to leave the car by the bouncers.
“I had taken delivery of the vehicle about two weeks
before the incident. I had paid my dealer N50,000 and the other N100,000 was in
the car because I could not pay it in the bank. The money was in the car and
since they had sent me away from the car, I could not retrieve it.
“The following day, I did not find the money in the cab.
They did not even let me wind the car windows up before they chased me out. I
noticed that the car was ransacked. I managed to obtain Davido’s phone number
and called him. But he did not pick his call. So I sent him a text message.
Thirty minutes after I sent him the message, someone picked up the call and
promised to pass the message to him. I did not get my car key throughout that
day. I went to the police station to file a report,” Ajibola said.
“When all efforts to contact Davido proved futile, the
police had to go to Susie. Unfortunately, she was of no help.”
“On the fourth day, I went to Susie’s house with the
police. The ladies said they were not the ones that beat me. They said the only
help they could render was to give me Davido’s address and that they had since
settled their differences. The whole point of the police visit was to use the
girls to get to Davido, but the girls made a phone call to an aunt of theirs
and the policemen left them, saying that they were not the ones that assaulted
me,” the cab driver said.
CRIME DIGEST learnt that the genesis of the fight was
because the singer was allegedly caught cheating on his girlfriend.
Ajibola continued, I learnt that Davido was dating one of
the girls I picked up. They went to his hotel room and caught him with another
girl who was their friend. This is what I learnt caused the fight. The police
collected Davido’s phone number and called him, but he kept asking them if they
knew whose son he was.
“He warned the policemen not to threaten or intimidate
him. They in turn told him that they were just inviting him for questioning and
not to arrest him. Since then, the effort to get him has not been
forthcoming. I had to go to the hospital
because I was really injured. Davido gave me a blow to the ear which made it to
bleed.
“One day, the DPO of the station assured me that they
would make sure they get him. He was irritated by Davido’s boasting that he was
immune to arrest. On July 13, one Sharon Adeleke asked me to come and collect the
key of my car at 1004. I told her to come and meet me at the police station.
She did not turn up till the DPO intervened.
“The DPO invited the Sharon Adeleke, she eventually came
to drop the key of the car. I told them that I could not just collect the key
of the car without documentation that they gave me the key of the car without a
penny, though I lost money and my car got damaged. When I said this, the DPO
told me that I did not look like someone that was worth N100,000.
“He said I have no proof that there was money in the car
and that all he was after was to retrieve my car keys for me. He said that if I
wanted to do anything I should go to court and he ordered me out of his office.
Till this moment I have not received my car keys or an apology from the
singer,” Ajibola said.
When contacted on the telephone, both Davido and the
Divisional Police Officer of Bar Beach police station, Fakeye Adegoke, refused
to answer their calls nor did they reply the text messages sent to them.
But Davido’s publicist, Valerie Obaze, denied her
client’s involvement in the incident.
“Davido has no knowledge of any incident involving the
assault of a taxi driver or the illegal seizure of his car. He does not condone
violence of any sort and will not be commenting on this untrue allegation,” she
said via email
However, the Police Public Relations Officer, Ngozi
Braide promised to get back to CRIME DIGEST with the facts of the matter later.