Carpenter killed in high -tension wire tragedy; wife collapse and died too
There was confusion in the Mushin area of Lagos State after a 51-year-old carpenter, Muritador Ajayi, was electrocuted by a live high-tension wire.
The deceased was working on the roof of
a building under construction on Bamigboye Street, when power was suddenly
restored to the area.
Muritador’s hammer was said to have
touched the wire as he raised it to drive in a nail, which led to his
electrocution.
He was rushed to a general hospital,
where he was confirmed dead.
It was gathered that his wife, Taiye, on
getting the sad news, collapsed and was taken to a private hospital where she
also died.
It was a somber atmosphere when our
correspondent visited the victims’ residence on Alafia Street.
One of the deceased’s children,
Sunkanmi, explained that both victims had been buried in accordance with
Islamic rites.
Sunkanmi, who was with his father when
the incident happened, said it took about 10 minutes after he fell off the roof
before he could get help.
He said, “It was around 9am last Friday
that the incident happened. My father was contracted to roof the house which
was under construction. There was a high-tension wire that passed near the roof
of that particular house.
“He had asked me to lift a plank for him
so he could lay it on the roof. I just noticed that he fell off the roof; I
thought his feet slipped. I later realised that it was when he lifted the
hammer that he was electrocuted and fell.
“I saw him vomiting blood and I started
shouting for help, but nobody came. It was as if the area was deserted.”
He said some residents heard his cry
about 10 minutes later and assisted in taking his father to the Mushin General
Hospital.
Another child of the family, Yusuf, said
Taiye, who was their father’s second wife, followed them to the hospital.
He said, “The doctor asked us to take
our father into the ward, and we were asked to wait outside. My father’s second
wife followed us to the hospital and waited at the gate.
“But someone took her to a shop and it
was there that a child went to break the news to her that her husband was dead;
she collapsed immediately. She was taken to a private hospital on Araromi
Street, where she was also pronounced dead.”
It was gathered that Taiye had yet to
give birth to any child for Muritador before her demise.
The case was reported at the Olosan
Police Division.
The victim’s first wife, Nosimat, while
fighting back tears, said she was at home when she got the news.
She said, “We have been married for over
24 years and we had four children together. The morning the incident happened,
he said all those who were supposed to join him to work on the building gave
excuses and said they could not join him.
“I was the one who called our son to support
him. Even Sunkanmi said he had a place to go, but I begged him to join his
father. About 15 minutes after they left, power was restored. Some minutes
after, Sunknami ran home and started screaming that his father had been
electrocuted.”
She told our
correspondent that the family was not ready to make any case with the
owner of the house.
Nosimat, a trader, appealed for support
for her four children so that their education would not be affected by the
death of their father.
A resident, who did not identify himself,
said the late carpenter had just bought a car which he intended to use as a
taxi, when he died.
“He never got to drive the car before he
died,” he added.
The Police Public Relations Officer, SP
Dolapo Badmos, said she would call back, but she had yet to do so as of the
time of filing this report.
Punch
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