The joy of the family of Mr Lateef Lamina,
a senior sales executive officer with New
Telegraph newspaper, that the wife
survived the calamity that claimed
hundreds of lives in Mecca during the
concluded 2015 Hajj, turned to sorrow
recently when the daughter, a National
Youth Corps Service (NYSC) member
serving in Sokoto State, died in an auto
crash.
The victim, Balikisu Omolabake Temitope
Lamina, was said to have travelled home
to rejoice with the family on her mother’s
safe return from the Holy Land and was
returning to her duty post when the
tragedy occurred.
The family was in a pensive mood when
The Nation visited.
The father could not
hold back tears as he intermittently
wiped tears from his eyes while narrating
his last moments with the deceased
whom he referred to as his ‘hope’.
“My hope is dashed,” he said. “Balikisu,
my brilliant, promising and talented
daughter who had passion for
broadcasting is gone.
The mother
travelled to Mecca and came back
successfully. When she came back, we
were all happy that she survived the
misfortune that happened during the
pilgrimage. She (my late daughter)
decided to come home to see her. She
was given about four weeks to be away
from her service post.
Within two weeks
of her stay with us, they started calling to
say that her attention was urgently
needed. She was serving at Rima
Television in Sokoto and, at the same
time, a top member of the press crew.
When the call was coming, I started
having premonition that something was
about to happen.
I kept praying for God
to be in control. Her elder sister, Kadijat
was also serving in Kebbi State.
“When it was time for her to go back,
I followed her to Iddo where she was to
take a bus to Sokoto. When we got there,
I saw a Sienna bus that looked new, and
we paid.
We had an agreement with the
driver that he would take her to
Sokoto. She boarded the vehicle and we
bade each other goodbye. Instead of
taking her to Sokoto as agreed, the driver
dropped her off in Kaduna. As at 11.30
pm when we spoke, she was at Kau
Motor Park. I wanted her to pass the
night around the area but she said she
had already got a vehicle and that it
remained just two passengers for it to be
full. Eventually, they got the remaining
passengers and left. I wished her journey
mercy, hoping to speak with her in the
morning.
“At about few minutes past 4:00 a.m., my
phone rang. When I answered the call,
the caller asked if I was the father of
Balikisu, and I replied in the affirmative.
She went on to say that my daughter was
involved in an accident and that she died
on the spot. I became disconcerted and
wished it was a dream. Unfortunately, it
wasn’t a dream.
It was real. My daughter
who I saw off the previous night, and
spoke with few hours before the sad
news came, had died in an auto crash. I
was told that the accident occurred at
about 2:00 a.m. in Zamfara.”
Balikisu’s seating position behind the
driver apparently limited her chances of
survival, Lamina related. “A survivor said
the vehicle conveying them had head-on
collision with a lorry carrying cows. He
said my daughter was sitting behind the
driver and was trapped when the
accident occurred and that she was the
only one that died on the spot.
Immediately the day broke, the mother
gave me some me some money to quickly
travel down there.
“As I was making the arrangement, my
first child who is serving in Kebbi State
said I shouldn’t bother coming because
she didn’t want any unpleasant thing to
also happen to me. She would make
arrangement for the remains to be
brought back.
I quickly sent her some
money to get a vehicle that would bring
my late daughter’s remains back. Along
the line, the NYSC assistant director in
Sokoto called to sympathise with me.
“He asked if as a Muslim I would want her
buried immediately over there or would
like to see her remains. I said I would like
to see her remains. He then asked me to
leave the responsibility to them.
They
actually brought her back in their vehicle
and took active part in her burial. They
also gave us N30, 000 to entertain guests
that came, but we didn’t do that because
it is against our custom. I really commend
them for their efforts.”
Although he would not accuse anybody
of being responsible for his daughter’s
death, he said: “My pain as a father is that
I did everything possible for my children
not to be posted far away but it didn’t
work out. I have been working in the
media industry for over 30 years and
looking forward to seeing my highly
talented and brilliant child who had
passion to work in the media but bad
government policies have made that
impossible. My hope is dashed. I don’t
have university degree. I only managed to
have diploma when I was working with
Concord Press in the north. As poor as I
am, I struggled to train two of my
children in the university but the Nigerian
factor has robbed me of my joy. I never
liked the idea of travelling over a long
distance because of NYSC. What is the big
deal about the programme that I have
had to lose my precious daughter
because of it?
“Though, I don’t want to believe that she
was killed by anybody, but if they had not
mounted pressure on her to return to her
duty post, she would (not) have died.
How could I have struggled to nurture my
children to this point and the government
took both of them to that distance? I
know that if they were serving here that
similar thing could have happened, but it
would have been better if it had
happened close by than in distant place.”
He proceeded to chronicle his daughter’s
academic exploits. “She was an avid
reader and had her eyes fixed on her
dream of excelling academically. She
attended Ambassador Nursery and
Primary School here in Ota. She had a
rapid education as she moved from
Primary Four to secondary school. She
attended Iganmode Grammar School.
Before she completed her secondary
school education, she had written GCE
twice. She later wrote SSCE. Before her
graduation from secondary school, she
applied for admission at UNILAG but she
didn’t get it.
“When she did not get admission at
UNILAG, she proceeded to Moshood
Abiola Polytechnic, Ojeere for diploma in
Mass Communication. Thereafter, she
went for her Industrial Training at
Raypower and performed brilliantly. In
the process of doing that, she wrote
JAMB again and passed very well. This
enabled her to gain admission into
University of Benin where she
accomplished her desire of acquiring a
degree in Mass Communication. She had
passion for communication and was
prepared to give her all to make a mark in
the industry. When she was in her Year
Three, she went to Television Continental
(TVC) for her Industrial Training. Because
of her outstanding performance, she was
given the privilege of taking diction-
related course at a communication outfit
in Oshodi. When she was leaving TVC, she
was showered with lots of gifts because
of her excellent performance. She
graduated with 2\1.”
Already traumatised by their 21 year-old’s
untimely demise, the beleaguered family
have their plight further compounded by
pressure from NYSC officials in Kebbi State
that the elder sister should return to her
base or attract stiff penalty.
The embattled father said: “Another
frustration I am having now is that the
elder sister who led the NYSC officials to
bring my late daughter’s remains home
is also being pressured to return to her
duty post in Kebbi. With the terrible
experience we had with her younger
sister, we are scared of allowing her to
go back. We are traumatised and filled
with awe about allowing her to go back.
No parent who had had this kind of
distasteful experience would easily allow
another child to embark on similar
journey. If we allow her to go, we would
be stone dead all through the period she
would be on the road.
“Instead of understanding or
empathising with us, the NYSC officials
over there are threatening to penalise her
if she fails to return within a stipulated
period. I even called him to explain our
ordeal to him but he rebuffed me. When
she even went to notify one of the top
officials that she lost her sister in an
accident and would want to go with the
vehicle conveying her remains, the man
put obstacles in her path even when the
bus was ready to leave and just waiting
for her to join them. It is sheer
callousness and I want to appeal to
eminent Nigerians to help me facilitate
the redeployment of my first daughter,
Kadijat, who is serving with the Ministry
of Finance in Kebbi State to a nearby
place. There is no way we would have
peace of mind if she goes back there. We
have not overcome the shock we
suffered and wouldn’t want our plight
aggravated.”
Saturday, 12 December 2015
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