A
15-year-old resident of Ishaga Road in the Idi-Araba area of Lagos
State, Afusat Musa, has been electrocuted by a live wire that was
partially disconnected by officials of Eko Electricity Distribution
Company.
About four officials were said to have stormed the neighbourhood
penultimate Tuesday, around 2pm, and disconnected wires from houses,
whose residents had yet to pay their bills.
PUNCH Metro
learnt that the wire cut from a storey building was, however, abandoned
on the roof of a mosque near the building, while the other end was
still attached to an electric pole. Moments after power was restored on
the fateful day, Afusat, a Junior Secondary School three pupil, who
lived in a house next to the mosque, was electrocuted.
She was said to be returning from an errand at about 7pm and touched the metal pole of an aerial
mounted beside her house. She was rushed to a nearby hospital, where she was confirmed dead on arrival.
A brother of the deceased, Aminu Musa, told PUNCH Metro that the
manager of the Idi-Araba office of the EKEDC visited the community after
the incident was reported at the Itire Police Station and the Lagos
State Environmental Protection Agency.
Aminu added that the manager denied knowledge of the workers’ operation in the area on the fateful day. He said:
“Immediately
Afusat died, we went to the Itire Police Station. LASEPA was also
informed about the incident. The following day, LASEPA officials, the
electricity workers and their manager visited us. The manager denied
sending his men to disconnect wires.”
Afusat’s mother,
Zainab, a trader, said the workers eventually admitted complicity in the
occurrence when people confronted them, adding that the case was not
properly handled because the family was not influential. She said:
“We
initially thought it was our wire that caused the electrocution, but it
persisted after my daughter died. It was somebody who rushed in to tell
us that a live wire was abandoned on the roof of the mosque, which
touched our house’s roof. The workers initially denied that they did
come to our area for the operation. But when people insisted they were
the ones, they apologised, saying the wire was mistakenly abandoned. If
Afusat was from a rich family would the case die like that? They did not
even come in to sympathise with us; they stayed outside.”
The
deceased’s father, Alhaji Muhammed Musa, who described her as obedient,
said her death was caused by the nonchallant attitude of the
electricity officials. He said:
“Many
wires were disconnected that day and we had to settle them to fix them
back. I paid them N1,500. A wire was not re-fixed because the residents
of the house did not settle them. It was carelessness on their part to
have abandoned the wire that was not disconnected from the pole. When
there was electricity later that day, people started complaining of
shocks but we did not know where it came from until Afusat died.”
The
Chairman of the community development association, Mr. Rasheed Bakare,
said prior to the incident, several invitations had been sent to the
electricity company for a discussion on the poor state of electric poles
in the area, but were ignored. He said:
“Before
this incident, we have written letters to EKEDC, inviting them for
deliberation on lingering issues relating to electricity in this
community, but they did not honour our invitations. There are cases of
falling wires and illegal pole climbing, among others, which we wanted
to discuss with them.”
The Lagos State police spokesperson,
DSP Joe Offor, said efforts were on to get the statements of the workers
complicit in the pupil’s death. He said:
“The
DPO informed Lagos State of the incident and invited the concerned
workers to the station, but they have yet to honour the invitation.
Whenever our men go to their office, they are always told that the
workers have gone out. We are still making efforts to ensure that they
come to the station.”