Risikat
Akande has had enough. She was getting tired of reminding Saheed to always wash
the dishes immediately after eating – that was the fourth time in one week that
her exuberant grandson had stormed out of the house after eating without
washing them. This time, the septuagenarian thought, the dishes will remain
unwashed until Saheed comes back. But she was wrong. Saheed never returned to
the house that day or ever.
Ajibaye
Saheed desired so much from life. But above all he wanted to break free from
the poverty of Dopemu, a sprawling Lagos slum. A good education is a potential
ticket to that escape. He had a diploma in Engineering from Lagos CityPolytechnic. With widespread unemployment and cascading
standard of education, he would be lucky to get a casual job as a factory hand
with his diploma. That was not the life he dreamt of. He needed a better
qualification to stand a chance at living his dream. But there is this other
yearning that needed pursuing.

Hugely
popularly among friends, Saheed, or Obama as friends like to call him, loved
being noticed. He was bouncy and amiable. His friends at home and school all
agreed that he was fun to be with. Though he relishes the attention, it wasn’t
enough for this ambitious 27-years-old.
He was
introduced to Nollywood and already appeared in several fringe roles in the
Yoruba arm of the industry. Though he was getting noticed, the process was too
slow. For Saheed, “making it” was like a market place one needn’t approach from
one path. He saved some money and decided to go back to school to obtain
a higher diploma.
On
February 25, he went to collect his admission letter for a Higher National
Diploma (HND) in Engineering from the admission office of Lagos City Polytechnic.
Few minutes later he slumped and died in a classroom where he was seated.
No
help in sight
According
to several students who saw what happened, after he fell, Saheed was hurriedly
carried to the administrative area of the school that houses the office of the
Registrar and the Rector. He was placed on the bare floor and for more than 30
minutes no one made any attempt to administer any form of first aid or
volunteer to take him to a hospital, the students, who did not want their names
mentioned for fear of victimisation, claimed.
“The
Rector and the Registrar were present but nothing was done. Nobody was ready to
offer his car to take him to the hospital,” said one aggrieved student.
“They
were busy arguing that he wasn’t a student of the school and nothing could be
done to help him,” added another student.
“After he
was taken away, they cleaned up the bloodstain on the floor and continued with
lectures as if nothing happened. Saheed did his ND (National Diploma) in this
school. And he came to pick up his admission letter for the HND programme. How
could they say he wasn’t a student?” he said as he fruitlessly tried to plug
the tears that well up in his eyes with his thumb and index finger.
A doctor
at the nearby Holy Trinity Hospital where he was taken said Saheed was already
dead by the time he was brought to the hospital.
“We
didn’t even admit him. He was DOA (dead on arrival) I took one look at him,
check his vitals and told them he was dead,” he said.
The
Rector of the Lagos City Polytechnic, Akin Oki, said any suggestion that Saheed
was left unattended to for 30 minutes is nothing but a “wicked lie.”
“It took
us less than 15 minutes after he slumped to take him to the hospital,” he said.
In fact, I was going to use my car but it was blocked by the Registrar’s car
and the Registrar happened to be in the toilet when it happened.”
Though he
confirmed that Saheed was a former student, he said he was no longer a student
of the institution technically.
“He came
to obtain an HND form. He was no longer our student but we decided to help him
on humanitarian ground. We should be commended for our efforts.”
Mr. Oki
and other principal officers of the institution were among those that took
Saheed to the hospital.
Similarly,
Charles Kuye, the school’s Director for Student Affairs, who claimed to have
given Saheed CPR before he was taken to the hospital, said the deceased was
attended to immediately he slumped.
“I knew
Saheed personally. He was even my Facebook friend. He was very popular among
the students. There was no reason why we could have abandoned him for 30
minutes. I and two other students were in the pick-up that took him to the
hospital. I was the one that called his relatives and I stayed at the hospital
until they arrived. People should thank us for what we did,” he said angrily.
The
twenty-thousand naira gift
“Nobody
told us what killed our son. He was a health young man and apart from the
occasional malaria he has no history of any serious ailment. The school’s
officers were about leaving when we got to the hospital. They only gave
N20,000.00 and told us to go bury Saheed,” said a heartbroken Mrs. Akande.
She said
she also observed that just before Saheed’s body was taken from the hospital
for burial, it started bleeding from the nose.
“We are
not saying anybody was responsible for Saheed’s death. We leave everything to
God,” she said, her eyes dried with grieve.
Mr. Oki
said the school gave Saheed’s family the money because they said he was going
to be buried the same day.
“We gave
them the money to support them with his burial arrangement,” he said.
Mr. Kuye
said he wasn’t aware that Saheed was bleeding from the nose, but blamed the
family if that really happened.
“See,
after he was pronounced dead by the doctor, his mother brought a perfume and
she poured some on his nose. She then placed a picture of T.B Joshua on his chest. She gave me five numbers
of Pastor T.B Joshua. Because she didn’t have credit on her phone, I used my
phone to call him. After I put the call through, she spoke in a secret language
before the pastor started praying. At that point Saheed started fuming from the
mouth. At that point we thought he was going to come to. We prayed for hours
but nothing happened.”
Unscholarly
environment
Some of
the student who spoke to us complained about the dilapidated infrastructure and
facilities at Lagos City Polytechnic. They said that the school lacks basic first
aid materials or an ambulance.
A putrid
smell of unwashed toilet hits in the nose like a pugilist’s fist as one
approaches the Engineering Department. The students’ toilet is broken. The
tiles around the toilet wall have turned black and urine and water floods the
toilet floor.
Mr Oki
blamed the students for the state of the toilet.
“We have
cleaners cleaning the toilet round the clock. But our students are unhygienic
and they mess the place up all the time,” he said.
There is
an old wooden first aid box outside the Director of Student’s Affairs office.
Mr Oki, however, ignored several requests to show the content of the box to our
reporter.
Students
of the institution, however, say that if the first aid box was well equipped,
and a competent medic nearby, Saheed may have been saved.
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