ANGER AS NINE-YEAR-OLD PUPIL DIES IN SOAKAWAY IN LAGOS
There was anger on Thursday morning on the Apata Street, Somolu area of Lagos after a nine-year-old child, identified as Riliwan, fell into a soakaway and died.
Riliwan, a primary six pupil of a
primary school in the area, was to attend his graduation ceremony that morning
where he was billed to be given prizes for coming first in his class, when
tragedy struck.
A resident said his parents, who were
devout Muslims, had sent him to pour away a bowl of dirty water they had rinsed
their hands in after eating Sahur (Ramadan pre-dawn meal), when he fell
into the pit.
Scene of the incident |
The resident, who did not want his name
mentioned, said, “The incident happened around 4am. There was no power supply.
His parents had finished eating the early morning meal, preparatory to the
fasting, when they asked him to empty a bowl of dirty water inside the gutter.
“As he went out in the dark, he stepped
on a covering on the soakaway, which gave way.”
Another resident said after his parents
did not see him return, they became worried and searched everywhere for him.
It was about seven hours later that
one of his foot wares was seen at the mouth of the soakaway.
“People rallied round and tried draining
the water in the soakaway, before they were able to bring him out. But he had
died,” he added.
A crowd of sympathisers were seen in
front of the house condemning the owner of the building for not sealing the
soakaway before giving out the apartments.
Our correspondent observed that there
were two openings on the soakaway.
The holes were said to be covered with
used printing plate sheets.
An angry resident ran to the place where
the victim fell and pulled back one of the plates to the pit surface to
demonstrate how “anybody could have fallen victim at that time of the night”
“This house was completed four months
ago and the owner did not deem it fit to cover the soakaway with slabs. This is
evil, sheer wickedness,” he added.
Men of the Lagos State Fire Service and
policemen from the Somolu division were sighted by our correspondent at the
scene.
it was learnt that council officials had been
informed and had visited the house.
When our correspondent approached the
father of the victim, he said he had no comment.
“Please we have nothing to say. We don’t
want this matter blown out of proportion. We will be burying him soon,” he
said.
Our correspondent could hear a woman
wailing, “Riliwan, Riliwan” as people in the room tried consoling her.
The deceased’s father asked some reporters to leave the house, and the gate into
the house was shut.
Nobody was ready to point out the owner
of the house for comment.
However, an executive member of the
Community Development Association, who pleaded anonymity, told our
correspondent that septic tanks in Apata and Debari streets were not well
constructed.
She said, “If the soakaway was well
constructed, since its a new house, the boy ought to have fallen into an empty
space. It will be easy for him to cry out for help.
“But landlords in Apata and Debari
streets make their soakaways in such a way that whenever it rains, they can
release wastes into the gutters.”
She appealed to the state’s Ministry of
Environment to conduct a check in the area for the safety of residents.
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