If they had
known, maybe they would have asked government to forget its job so
they could live together. This is part of the lamentation of Mr
Austin Amu, the widower of Mrs Sandra Amun, who lost her
life, Saturday, March 15, 2014, at the Samuel Ogbemudia Stadium Benin City,
where the recruitment exercise of the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS) took
place.
Incidentally,
Amun, from Uzebba, Owan West Local Government Council of Edo State,
participated in the recruitment exercise with the deceased but survived
the stampede. It was a pitiable sight when Sunday Vanguard visited the
family’s residence in Benin City watching the husband of the
deceased trying to administer medication on their last born, Favour, who
was crying due to cough and catarrh.
Amun
recalled that he and Sandra had woken up on the ill-fated day
and had their bath together as they had always done in the past 10 years.
They planned to get to the recruitment venue on time. They actually
did but met an uncontrollable crowd at the stadium as
thousands of applicants struggled to participate in the job test.
Sunday Vanguard
found that the stampede occurred because the organizers decided to lock
the big gates and used the small ones at the stadium. As a
result, people had to pay N1000 each to gain entry..
Those who could not afford the money made frantic efforts to find their
way into the stadium at all costs, a situation that created chaos.
Amun
narrated his story to Sunday Vanguard: “ I applied for the job as a
senior secondary school holder while my wife applied as a graduate
because she finished from Auchi Polytechnic. On that day, while we were
on queue, I could have been the victim because while I was in
the crowd, I almost couldn’t breath. I told her we should go home.
But she
said I shouldn’t worry, that I should find somewhere to
relax while she will be at the stadium and monitor things and then get back to
me. About 20 minutes later, her younger brother who also came to
write the examination saw me and asked after his sister. I told him she
was in the crowd. 30 minutes later, somebody shouted that a woman had
died.
I didn’t know it
was my wife. It was then they now went to open the big gates into the
stadium. The first time, they were using the small gates; it was after
the incident that they went to open the big gates, for people to
enter the stadium.. I thought I was going to see her inside the stadium.
I went round the place, I didn’t see her. Around 4 pm
when we were about to write the test, I still had not seen her and I
became more worried but the brother encouraged me to write the
test saying maybe she was writing her own somewhere. After the test, I sat by
the gates thinking while coming out I would see her. I waited till
around 6.30 to 7 pm.
Later,
thought maybe she would be in my viewing centre. I went there
but didn’t see her, people came around to watch football, but because I
had not seen my wife, I couldn’t open the shop. I locked the place and called
her younger brother and my friend who has a vehicle. We went to the hospital
where they rushed those injured during the test, to check if she was
there; but they said they had discharged four people who
sustained injuries.
They checked
their names, my wife’s name was not there. They now said there was one woman
who Immigration officials brought without a name and they used no name to book
the woman’s corpse. I now requested to see the woman. Behold I saw
my wife in the mortuary sleeping alone. I touched her, she could
not touch me, I called her, she could not answer.
I tried to
call her phone because I did not believe she was dead; but she did not
pick. But somebody picked her phone on the ground and the person told me he
couldn’t reach the owner until after the test, because of the crowd. It was the
next day that the Civil Defence people that collected it brought it home.
“Since the
incident nobody has called me from the Immigration Service. The only people
that came to see me were from a human rights group based in Abuja. They
asked how I felt and what happened. I told them the story. I don’t know where
to start from. We had been together even before she went to Auchi
Polytechnic, she went to the polytechnic from my house; she finished her
studies before we started having kids.
She graduated
in HND banking and finance seven years ago. The most senior child, a
girl, Favour, is six years, Miracle, the second, is five and
the last, Favour (male), is three years. I want assistance from
government, let them give the children scholarship, give me and my
brother-in-law jobs. My wife’s mother and grandmother are still alive; she is
the first daughter of her family and I am the first son of my family too. This
load is too much for me and I don’t know where to start.”
Tags
Society
The lord Ị̣̣s̶̲̥̅̊ υ̲̣̥я̣̣̥ strenght and God will see to υ̲̣̥я̣̣̥ situations and restore u,may υ̲̣̥я̣̣̥ wife gentle soul rest in perfect peace,as for the children,God will provide their need bountifully
ReplyDeleteMay her soul rest in perfect peace!
ReplyDeleteToo sad! RIP.
ReplyDeleteTake her my guy.God will send u help.
ReplyDeleteWe should try to be organise in this country, by putting experiences people to handie things d way it should be, look at what this have caused this family. D immigration woman involve want dis offer to ceculate even to d poor gradute but d organizers are after money nawaoh
ReplyDeleteThis is a clear manifestation of the failure of this goverment . I don't know what to say about Jonathan . May God the gentle soul of your wife rest in peace. God is definitely sending a helper to the children.
ReplyDeleteImmigration nonsense ! Wat a waste sorry sweet Bros
ReplyDeleteSo sorry fot your loss
ReplyDelete