When on June 13, 2013, the Ebun family
went to pick up their son, Jide, from the Murtala Mohammed International
Airport, Lagos, everybody was happy because the 17-year-old boy had
been in Canada where he was schooling and had not seen his family for
two years.
The family comprising the father,
Olusegun, the mother, Funke, the first son, Jide, the only daughter,
Damilola, and the last child, nine-year-old Timilehin, were in a Sports
Utility Vehicle, a Nissan Pathfinder, with registration number HD844EKY.
Timilehin sat in the centre of the back seat with his two siblings where he was playing a hand-held game.
The nine-year-old boy and his father
were engaged in an argument as regards his future ambition. While the
little boy said he wanted to be a footballer, his father advised him to
go to the university to study medicine after which he could go ahead to
become a footballer.
The reunion was however short-lived. On
getting to Mile 12 end of Ikorodu Expressway, a police stray bullet
pierced through the windscreen of the vehicle and killed Timilehin on
the spot.
The deceased’s father said that the police had stolen their joy.
He said life would never be the same without the little boy who was full of life and was always making the house lively.
Narrating what transpired on the fateful
day, he said, “Jide had been away for two years and my plan was to go
and visit him in Toronto, Canada. However, he said he missed his
siblings and wanted to come home to see them. So, we decided to let him
come. On that day, we went to pick him up at the airport. We were on our
way back home at Ikorodu.
“On getting to Kosofe Bus Stop at Mile 12, we saw policemen trying to extort money
from a commercial bus driver who had climbed the culvert to drive back
towards Ketu. There was an argument in the process and policemen started
shooting.
“One of the bullets pierced through my
windscreen and hit Timilehin in the eye. The broken glass also injured
my wife and Jide. Immediately after the shooting, the policemen boarded
their patrol vehicle and fled to their station. I carried my son to a
nearby hospital where he was declared dead.”
Olusegun said touts were able to chase the policemen but in the ensuing pandemonium, his telephone and ATM cards were stolen.
He said on getting to the police station, he dropped the corpse of his son at the counter and all the policemen fled.
He said he remained at the station for two hours as the policemen refused to take his statement.
He said, “I got to the station with my
son’s corpse and I created a scene as I told the policemen that they
must kill me too. They all fled and when the Divisional Police Officer
finally attended to me, the policemen were denying the allegations as
they traded blame.
“After two hours at the station, I had
to call a senior official of the Lagos State Government who then spoke
with the DPO. My wife then wrote a statement.”
Olusegun described his son as an intelligent boy and a fan of Manchester United Football Club.
He said, “Timilehin was the only one
that could operate our television very well even though he was just in
primary three at Royal Scholars Montessori School. He loved watching
Eurosports and cartoons and his best team was Manchester United. The
police have stolen our joy.”
The Deputy Police Public Relations Officer, Damasus Ozoani, said that it was possible that Timilehin was killed by armed robbers as a robbery incident had occurred in the area that night.
He however said the team of policemen
on duty had been arrested and transferred to X Squad, the police
department in charge of handling crimes committed by policemen.
He said, “Some policemen were trying to
arrest a commercial bus driver when violence erupted. The policemen
fired teargas but the hoodlums proved stubborn so the policemen called
for backup. When backup arrived, shots were fired to disperse the
hoodlums and the policemen arrested the driver.
“About two hours later, a man came to
the station with his dead son, saying policemen killed him. The team of
policemen has been arrested along with the driver. However, we are not
ruling out the possibility that the boy was killed by robbers because
there was a robbery in the area that night.”
A police source identified some of the arrested policemen as Inspectors Olaleye Sunday, Sule Dauda and Sergeant Razaq Alowonle.
The deceased’s father, however, berated the police authorities for trying to exonerate their men.
“It was policemen that killed my son,
not armed robbers because I saw a patrol vehicle; except robbers now use
patrol vehicles. The police have stolen our joy and all we want is
justice for the death of Timilehin,” he said.-punch
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