It
would be nice if the state government could bury her (Chidera). We have nobody
to run to because we are orphans.” These were the words of Chukwuebuka Nweke,
the elder brother of the two girls – Blessing and Chidera – who drowned at the
Asata River in Enugu State.
Residents of Enugu metropolis
are yet to recover from the tragedy that struck last Saturday, when the two
girls who went to swim in the river with some destitute drowned in the dirty
water.
Grieving Chukwuebuka, who noted that
Chidera would have resumed school on Monday, said none of their relatives cared
about their welfare.
“None of our relatives cares about
us, we are just living on our own, and hoping that some day goodluck will smile
on us.
“Chidera was a pupil of Nkpologwu
Primary School, New Haven – just before PRODA. She was supposed to have entered
Primary Six last Monday. But she is no more. I work as a cleaner and do other
odd jobs to survive and save money so
that I can also acquire education in future.”
For Blessing, he said, “She was
related to us, but all the same we called her our sister because she didn’t
know her parents and had been living with us all her life.
“The painful thing about the
whole situation now is that we are orphans and we have no one to turn to. This
is a big challenge for me.”
The matter could be termed worse
considering that the deceased, before death came calling, had merely survived
the vicissitudes of life by hawking handkerchiefs and hand towels at the New
Haven/Bisala Road junction, about 800 metres from the Enugu State Government
House gate.
Saturday PUNCH findings showed that the two deceased
girls, had lived with their elder brother, Chukwuebuka in a shanty in New Haven
area of Enugu since the death of their parents about four years ago.
It just could not get any better
for them as their brother, just 24 years old, could barely survive. He earns
N7, 500 monthly working as a cleaner in an undisclosed shopping plaza, also in
New Haven.
To compound their woes, our
correspondent learnt that their relatives from Akpugo Village in Nkanu East
Local Government Area of Enugu State hardly came to their rescue whenever
feeding was a problem. Coincidentally, the current Chief of Staff to the Enugu
State Government, Mrs. Ifeoma Nwobodo, hails from Akpugo in Nkanu East LGA.
A source said that Chukwuebuka
resided in a one-room apartment at an undisclosed location in New Haven. They
said the one-room apartment was in a building that had been abandoned for about
12 years now. They added that a relative to the property owner usually rent the
rooms to students and artisans at a much subsidised rate of about N1, 000
monthly.
It was also gathered from hawkers at
New Haven Junction that the deceased made about N1, 000 weekly hawking wares,
“and with this they survived with their elder brother (Chukwuebuka) and a
little brother of theirs,” said a hawker, Chisom Edeh.
Edeh added, “Their relatives
did not care for them, and that was why none of them came for Chidera’s corpse
at the mortuary in Enugu State University Teaching Hospital (Parklane). Just
today (Wednesday), we heard the local government authorities (Enugu North) had
gone to dispose the body since it was apparent none of their relatives would
come to claim it.”
When Saturday PUNCH visited ESUTH mortuary, the morgue
attendants confirmed that the corpse had been removed by the local government
authorities.
Investigations showed that the
younger girl (Blessing), about eight years old, had jumped into the deepest
part of the river and fearing that she could drown, the elder sister (Chidera)
about 13 years, dived into the river to rescue her; but unfortunately both of
them drowned.
Some of the destitute children,
who confessed to have lured the girls to the river, explained to Saturday PUNCH that when they noticed that they had
been swallowed by the fast flowing river, they quickly alerted passersby who
engaged four local divers to help rescue them.
The search, one of the
destitute said, lasted for about an hour, between – 4.30 and 5.30pm that
fateful Saturday. They, however, said that the four divers only succeeded in
rescuing the lifeless body of the 13-year-old girl while the second had not
been found as at last Wednesday night.
“The incident did not only generate a
traffic jam on Bisala Road last Saturday, but the gridlock had continued to
build up by the day as motorists, passersby and of course the destitute, had
continued to gather to ascertain if the second body might be found at the banks
of the river,” said a local diver, Cornelius Ugwu.
Ugwu said he had been keeping vigil
at the river should the body float. He also said that some of his counterparts
came at intervals to join him, to ward off criminals who might be on the
lookout for the body for ritual purposes.
He said, “News had got to us
that some people who are not family members or relatives are hanging around the
place all night, and fearing that they may be searching for a ritual meat, we
voluntarily chose to keep guard, at least for now.”
Beyond ritual purposes, a
motorist, Mrs. Chinenye Uzor, said, “It is time the government wade into this
matter, because the traffic is building. Whenever drivers get to that point,
they slow down to catch a glimpse of what the underground river looks like,
thereby slowing vehicular movement.
“Going through that road on ordinary
days is even difficult because of school run activities, but with this
development, it is now obviously hell on earth.”
Aside Ugwu and Uzor’s opinions, one
thing that seemed to be baffling concerned residents was the fact that
throughout the rescue operation, no security operative was seen at the scene,
which, Uzor said, was “about one kilometre away from the Government House.”
A highly placed government
official who didn’t want his name in print said, “It is so sad that even the
police vehicles that reportedly passed by when there were attempts to rescue
the girls never stopped.
“One thing that annoys me
further is that the police point at New Haven junction/round-about is about 100
metres from the scene, the police officers there could not even come around.
Yet all these police officers gallivant about in the new KIA cars that were
given to them by Governor Sullivan Chime for security and emergency purposes.
One of the cars was just about 100 metres from the scene of the incident, yet
the police officers attached to that car couldn’t come over.
“If there were no cars, the same
policemen would be the ones crying foul that they couldn’t save a situation
because of absence of cars. Now that they have luxury cars to work with, they
have even become lazier than they used to be.”
When confronted, the police
spokesperson in Enugu, Mr. Ebere Amaraizu, simply said, “We are now aware of
the matter and the department handling it is not through with its
investigation. As soon as it is done, I’ll reach you for our statement.”
Chukwuebuka blamed his sisters’ death
on the destitute. “She (Chidera) was only 13 and had never tried swimming. I
feel so sad that she had to die this way. She would have been alive if these
little, tiny things who beg for alms on the road had not lured her and her
friend to swim in the river.”
Already, residents in the state
have renewed the campaign that destitute should be sacked from the streets, or
they could cause more harm. They attribute their rising figure in Enugu
metropolis to the inefficiency of the government to sustain Acts of Legislation
or fully implement its laws.
To them, the increasing presence of
destitute and hawkers is fast making the city one of the dirtiest in the
country.
However, the Commissioner in charge
of the Enugu Capital Territory Development Authority, Mr. Ikechukwu Ugwuegede,
said that the government was not resting on its oars. “Government is determined
to make Enugu a world class city by ensuring it is environmentally and
physically cleaned, as well as adequately planned,” Ugwuegede noted.
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Wot a pity!...God will Ÿ̲̣̣̣̥ø̲̣̣̥u̶̲̥̅̊ D̶̲̥̅̊ hrt to endure D̶̲̥̅̊ loose
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