Dr. Anthony Monye-Emina, an Associate Professor of Economics and
Chairman, UNIBEN chapter of ASUU, who was in the vehicle with the late
Prof. Iyayi, tells JETHRO IBILEKE how the accident occurred and why they
think it might not just be an accident
Could you please narrate what actually happened?
After taking our meal at Lokoja, we bought some copies of the day's newspapers. Thereafter, we entered NNPC mega filling station just on the outskirts of Lokoja, refilled our tanks and continued our journey. We noticed that the stretch of road between that mega station up to the point of the accident was very busy. We were moving in a convoy. UNIBEN vehicle was in the front, followed by DELSU – Delta State University – Abraka and Ambrose Alli University, AAU, Ekpoma. When we left, DELSU was immediately behind us but we were not immediately seeing Ekpoma, so we asked the driver to slow down, considering the busy nature of the road and the fact that Ekpoma was to join us; and so, he slowed down.
We
passed the Road Safety checkpoint, and after that one, we passed
another Road Safety checkpoint. But not up to 200 metres after the point
of the second Road Safety checkpoint, we saw this convoy of Kogi State
governor heading in the opposite direction, apparently coming from Abuja
and heading to Lokoja. There was no big vehicle in front of us and
behind us and there was no threat of overtaking from any direction. Just
toward the tail end of the convoy, I noticed that the last escort
vehicle, a police pick-up van, veered off their lane and was heading
straight at us. So I asked the driver of the vehicle to watch the
vehicle. As soon as I told him to watch the vehicle, it kept coming and
it looked as if the speed with which it was coming increased, so I asked
the driver to leave the road for him. Even before I said so, the driver
had started leaving the road.
But as he made to leave the road,
the police vehicle kept coming at us, and before we knew it, we heard
this impact, and then, our vehicle staggered a little, and before we
knew it, it rolled over three times and came to a halt.
When the
vehicle came to a halt, I turned back, but I didn't see the other
occupants with me. We were actually three, plus the driver, making us
four. Two of them were at the back, and I was in the front with the
driver. So I tried to open the door. By then, I was already bleeding
from the injury on my hand and my legs. I tried to open the door but I
couldn't. My colleagues from DELSU and AAU who had arrived, helped me to
open the door. By then, we saw that the other lady, Mrs. Iloh, who is
the National Welfare Officer, was hanging on the window. From her waist
down, she was outside dangling while the rest of the body was inside the
vehicle upside down. And then, Prof was seated in an upright position.
The
Road Safety [officers] which we just passed were watching. It was a
straight stretch of the road. No curve, no hill, no valley, no pothole
on the road there, a level land for that matter. So they came, they were
the ones that helped us to pull down Dr. (Mrs.) Iloh whom we thought
didn't make it. But surprisingly, after a few minutes, she opened her
eyes and raised her hand and tried to inquire what had happened.
Then
we looked at Prof. He was motionless, but sitting in an upside
position. So we went closer and we noticed that the left upper arm was
shattered and we saw a mass of blood around the chest.
An
ambulance in the convoy of the governor came back on noticing the
accident, picked the occupants of the police van and wanted to drive
off. But with the intervention of my colleagues from DELSU and AAU, they
came back and picked Dr. (Mrs.) Iloh while we tried to pull Prof out of
the vehicle, hoping that he was unconscious, but before we could do
that, the ambulance had left. It was the Road Safety people that helped
us to pull him out of the vehicle and carried him to the hospital. And
it was at the hospital that they pronounced him dead.
When they
took him to the mortuary, it was then we noticed that he had a hole in
the chest region, close to the heart, it was massive. But we don't know
what could have caused that injury.
There are insinuations that he was likely shot with a lethal weapon, possibly a shot gun. Did you hear anything like a gunshot?
Well,
I wouldn't be in a position to say because, during the impact I heard
the sound when the two vehicles collided. And even with the fact that it
was a police vehicle, it is posible that, naturally as we usually
notice, those cops in the escort vehicle of governors are always armed.
So anything could have happened between the point of impact and so on.
Reports from Lokoja had it that an iron from the seat pierced the Prof from the back to his chest, is that correct?
That
is not correct, we didn't notice any broken piece of iron from the
seat, because the following day when we got to the scene, we started
looking around, we didn't notice any broken iron from the seat. But we
noticed that the window glasses were shattered, but they couldn't have
caused that kind of injury.
From your own assessment, would you say the man was murdered?
Well,
anything could have happened because, given the circumstances of the
accident, the vehicle veered off the road and was coming in our
direction. Even when we made effort to leave the way, he kept coming at
us. These give cause for suspicion and concern.
What was the reception like at the hospital in Lokoja?
When
we got to Lokoja, they first referred us to the Federal Medical Centre.
When we got there, I was eager to know his condition, so I followed
closely behind him. We got there, and the fellow we met at the point
there immediately said they should take him to the mortuary, I was very
angry, saying: Why will you ask them to take him to the mortuary? Have
you checked to confirm whether he is actually dead? So when he looked at
me and noticed that I was in the same vehicle, it was then he
apologised and said he would actually come and check him. That was the
point at which they moved me away from the scene to attend to my own
injuries.
But by the time I came out of the ward, they had left
the arrival point at the hospital and I was told that they had moved
him to the state specialist hospital because, according to them, the
mortuary at the Federal Medical Centre didn't have adequate facility to
preserve the corpse.
One disturbing aspect of the whole thing is
that after the incident – this thing happened between 11:15am and
11:30am on that fateful day – the governor of the state didn't come the
hospital until about 5pm. And then, when they took the other injured
colleague, Dr. (Mrs.) Iloh to the state specialist hospital, they told
us they didn't have facilities for X-ray and scanning, that the closest
to the hospital was Ilorin. But surprisingly, after the governor's
visit, the facilities came. So, we were disturbed. That was in fact part
of the reasons why we were angry.
And apart from his coming late,
he came with a team of journalists with cameras to video his visit to
the hospital. We felt that this was not proper. That was why we got
angry with him.
Source: PM News
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