They were in
their home, minding their business. Unknown to mother and daughter, there was
terror on the street outside.
Robbers laid
siege close to their house in Festac Town, Lagos, shooting indiscriminately
from a machine gun reportedly mounted at 23 Road Junction.
According to
nation, it was like a movie scene as they shot their way into two banks,
carting away millions of naira. Their stray bullets hit mother and daughter at
Block 8, 23 Road House, killing the child instantly. The mother reportedly died
an hour later because help came late.
Eyewitnesses said
some of the robbers wore hoods; others were in military camouflage.
Mrs. Jane
Beluchukwu-Ndirika, a nurse and her 14-month-old daughter Nmesoma, were inside
their two-bedroom apartment on the top floor of their three-storey building
when the bullets pierced through the door and hit them.
The late Mrs.
Beluchukwu-Ndirika was a nurse at the Igando General Hospital in Lagos.
Area E Commander
of the Lagos Police Mr. Frank Mba whose jurisdiction covers Festac and
environs, visited the house and confirmed that mother and daughter had died.
Yesterday’s
killings followed Monday’s killing of the Managing Director of the Lekki Free
Trade Zone by some members of the community. 17 people were yesterday arraigned
for the killing.
The late Mrs.
Beluchukwu-Ndirika’s friend, simply identified as Uche yesterday narrated in
tears, how mother and child died.
She said: “My
friend could not get help almost an hour after she was shot, because the
robbers were still on shooting spree.
“It was terrible.
They took their time. I cannot even explain, I do not know what to say. But I
can tell you that my best friend and sister was soaked in blood and in pains
for about one hour.
“I do not live in
Festac but I came to visit her and was about to leave this morning (yesterday).
We have already put my bag outside and I was playing with her son.
“Suddenly, we
started hearing gunshots, it was scary, I have never heard anything like that.
We peeped and saw people in army camouflage and some in suit. They took their
time, and were shooting non-stop.
“The bullets were
just sounding from different directions. So, we hid at the back of the door.
But the baby started crying and Jane went into the room and carried her.
“The next thing I
saw was something that moved like fire and in a very fast speed. The next thing
I heard was Jane screaming.
“She called out
for help, by that time she had managed to put the baby on the bed in the room.
She was becoming weak and going down, so I tried to hold her but could not.
“So, I took one
of her children’s clothes and tried to stop the blood flow, that was when I saw
a hole on her chest. I was shouting for help but no one could come out because
the armed robbers were still there.
“I called her
neighbours, who called the police but even the police did not come. The armed
robbers were there for about one hour after shooting. My friend was soaked in
blood. The baby’s blood also soaked the bed.
“I watched my
friend die and I could not do much to help her. Please do not even talk about
police because they did not come out.
“The armed
robbers took their time; they were loading bullets into their guns and were
shooting and discussing among themselves.
“From this room,
we heard them shouting and telling their colleagues to come out first; it looks
like they were just enjoying themselves without interruption,” she said.
Corroborating
Uche’s story, one Mr. John Irabor, a neighbour to the deceased said stray
bullets entered two other flats in the buiding.
He told The
Nation that Mrs. Beluchukwu-Ndirika was already dead by the time they took her
to the hospital.
“We took her to
the hospital in my car. The truth is by the time I got into her apartment after
the robbers left, she was already dead.
“They mounted
their machine gun just by the junction here. They were shooting repeatedly. I
am very disappointed with the police because I personnaly called them. I called
the Area Commander and I also called the state command’s Public Relations
Officer, who assured me they were on their way.
“Unfortunately,
the police did not show up until the robbers had fled.
“So, I came into
the apartment and alerted other neighbours; we quickly took her to a hospital
on 321 road (C close), but they refused to take her in and said she no longer
had the pulse.
“They told us to
take her to a general hospital and we quickly rushed to the hospital at First
Gate, where they issued her death certificate. We took her to The Lord’s
Chosen, where her husband is a Pastor and after some time, we took her to
Igando General Hospital, where she worked as a nurse.
“She was
confirmed dead at three hospitals. The baby also died. It was my son who
carried the baby on a bike and rushed her to the hospital but by that time she
had passed on too,” he said.
The baby’s
remains were wrapped and kept inside the room at the time of our reporter’s
visit to the house yesterday. Neighbours and church members thronged the
deceased’s residence.
It was also
learnt that a security man at one of the banks raided and another resident were
hit by stray bullets.
While the
resident, who was in a compound, adjacent to that of the Ndirikas, was said to
have had one of his fingers chopped off by stray bullet, it could not be
ascertained where the bullet hit the bank guard.
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