Tag: fire

  • Millions gone as fire destroys  properties

    Millions gone as fire destroys properties

    Properties worth millions of naira were destroyed yesterday by fire at Jakande Estate in Oke-Afa in Ejigbo Local Council Development Area of Lagos.

    The incident which started around 8.30am, according to eyewitnesses, affected four flats in block 369 in the Double Star area of the estate.

    The Nation learnt that the occupants of one of the flats left their gas switch on. Another person said the fire emanated from the air conditioning machine that wasn’t switch off.

    One Tokunbo, who own a pharmaceutical shop in front of the house, blamed the high voltage of electricity supplied by the Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN).

    Tokunbo said the electricity supply had been fluctuating since 5am.

    “I was sleeping when someone woke me that there was a fire outbreak. The high voltage also affected a bulb in the shop of a neighbour,” he said.

    “The occupants were not around when the fire started, they had all gone to work. They were alerted about the incident by some neighbours and when they returned, it was too late for them to save their belongings, they had all been destroyed by the inferno,” another eyewitness said.

    Another eyewitness who lives at the opposite block, said he was in his room when he heard his neighbour shouting fire in Yoruba.

    He spoke on condition of anonymity.

    “I heard someone shouting E gba wa o (help us), so I ran out thinking it was my neighbour’s flat that had caught fire; the next thing I saw was a heavy smoke coming out from that flat. The fire started up stairs and extended to the flat beside it. Everything in the two flats were razed. The fire fighters didn’t show up on time, so, we had to call on PHCN to switch off the light, which they did barely 35 minutes into the outbreak. The fire fighter came in an hour later.

    According to him, one woman’s charger was also destroyed by the voltage.

    A young man who gave his name as Daniel said the occupants of the building did not switched off the gas cooker before leaving for work.

    He said: “When the incident started, smoke was coming out from the kitchen. The owner of the other flat beside the flat upstairs was trying to save his one month old baby because his wife was not around; as he was trying to take the baby down stairs, the house had already caught fire. So, he couldn’t retrieve any of his properties.

    A man was seen lamenting the level of destruction.

    He couldn’t compose himself to speak with The Nation, rather shouting my brother’s house repeatedly.

    Director Lagos State Fire Service, Rasaq Fadipe, said the outbreak on the two-storey building might have been caused by electrical surge adding: “Two flats of the three bedroom apartment were consumed by fire and there was no causality. Also, before we got the alert, it was late because as at the time we got to the scene, everything was damaged but we prevented it from spreading to the first floor. It is possible they left an appliance on before leaving the house. Immediately we entered the estate, we saw the flames.”

    Fadipe urged residents to always put off electrical appliances especially if electricity wasn’t restored before leaving home.

    The Nation learnt that the fire fighters were assisted by men of the Nigerian police and officials of Lagos State Emergency Management Agency (LASEMA).

    Ejigbo LCDA Executive Secretary Jaiye Alabi and the council’s Head of Admnistration, Nurudeen Shobajo visited the scene to assess the extent of damage cause by the fire.

  • ‘Day I spat fire in court’

    ‘Day I spat fire in court’

    Mr  Tope Alabi is a Lagos-based activist-lawyer. He is well known for his suit seeking the removal of controversial police chief Mbu Joseph Mbu. He also got a judgment against the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) banning imposition of fines on erring motorists, except by a mobile court. Alabi tells JOSEPH JIBUEZE what drives him.

    What motivated you to sue Mbu Joseph Mbu?

    I am a social crusader. I studied law, not to make money per se, but to defend the cause of the poor masses. This is my calling. I sued Mbu Joseph Mbu because of the statement he made that for every policeman killed, the lives of 20 to 100 civilians would go in exchange. To say the least, it was an inciting statement that could have caused mass killings of civilians, including myself. To prevent such occurrence, I sued him. Actually, I was not asking for his head, but to checkmate him and other lawless police officers, who believe that with their uniform, they can do whatever they like as if they are above the law.

    What about the FRSC?

    I sued FRSC for violating the provisions of the Constitution and ignorance of the provisions of the Federal Roads Safety Commission (Establishment Act) 2007 and the National Roads Traffic Regulation 2012. The law says driving with shattered windshield or without windscreen is illegal, but they arrested me because of a cracked windscreen. Its men directed me to pay a fine without justification or court trial. I won the case at the Federal High Court Lagos. We are now on appeal.

    What was your most memorable day in court?

    That was when I appeared in the FRSC case and that of Mbu. The senior lawyers, who represented the office of the Attorney-General of the Federation, the National Assembly and FRSC will not forget how we spat fire at each other.

    What was your worst day in court?

    My worst day in court was the day judgment in the Mbu case was delivered without hearing notice, even when our motion to adduce further evidence was still pending. I was sad because judgment was delivered when the case was yet to be concluded and Mbu escaped punishment.

    What kind of person do you think should be appointed Attorney-General of the Federation?

    An AGF should not be for cash and carry. The position should be for someone with specified expertise and demonstrable competence. It should also be for a person with clean record. It should be for someone who has achieved credit in the legal profession. It should be someone, who can prosecute corrupt politicians without fear or favour, not someone who will embark on selective prosecution.

    If you were to recommend, who would it be?

    I will strongly recommend Femi Falana (SAN). I believe he is an honest man, who will not compromise. He has contributed immensely to the legal profession. His appointment will add credibility to the government of the day. I am very sure he will sanitise the legal profession and the judiciary and help rid Nigeria of corruption.

     Who are your role models in rights activism?

    The late Gani Fawehinmi (SAN), Falana and my mentor Kunle Adegoke.

    What challenges do you face as a young activist?

    One problem is the issue of locus standi. When former House of Representatives Speaker Aminu Tambuwal was facing political challenges, I prepared a case to stop the police and the Federal Government from harassing him, but I could not go forward because I found it difficult to reach Tambuwal to sign the affidavit in support of the originating process. Besides that, I have several public interest cases I would like to litigate on, but I do not have sufficient financial capacity to pursue them. I am still a young lawyer.

    Is that all?

    I also face the challenge of my colleagues, who are aiding criminals to escape the axe of the law. For instance, a client was defrauded of millions of naira. The fraudster was ready to refund the money and directed his lawyer to negotiate with us. Instead of negotiating, the lawyer went to court to file for enforcement of right to stop the process.

    What is your advice to other young lawyers?

    They should be focused. They should pursue the knowledge first; money will come later. I got a good training under Dr Muiz Banire (SAN). I also learnt from my mentors, such as Adegoke, Taiwo Kupolati, Falana, Chief Niyi Akintola (SAN) and Chief Wole Olanipekun (SAN), who is a father to me.

    If you were not a lawyer, what would you likely have been?

    A teacher.

    Where do you see yourself in the next 10 years?

    I don’t like the bench. I don’t see myself being a judge. But I pray I become a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN) as well as a Senior Advocate of the Masses (SAM).

     

  • Six fire incidents in Lagos on Saturday

    Fire incidents are on the rise in Lagos.
    The State Fire Service attended to six cases on Saturday.
    The Director of Fire Service, Rasaq Fadipe warned Lagos residents to be more safety conscious as the dry season approaches.
    “We attended to a fire call at 11 Ihuntayi Street, off Oba Oniru way in Lekki; there was also a fire outbreak which affected two buildings of eight rooms each at Muri Ojora Street, Amukoko, caused by fuel storage.
    “Then, a confectionery factory at 5 /6 Peter Olu Ajayi Street, Agbado was gutted by fire, but our quick intervention saved the day; a restaurant at Ijaiye, Ogba also caught fire, thankfully, we were able to contain the fire there so that it does not spread into other shops and a bank beside it.
    “There was also a call of a drunk driver who was involved in a lone accident at Ebute Ero. By the time we got there, policemen were already at the scene and the man identified as Kasumu claimed two of his passengers fell into the river.
    “But a search was conducted and no one was found in the river. You can see that most of the cases were caused by carelessness. People have to be careful especially now that the dry season is near, ” Fadipe said.

  • Suspected cultists set house, cars ablaze in Lagos

    Suspected cultists on Sunday set ablaze a building and two vehicles at Ogijo, Ikorodu, a Lagos suburb.
    The arsonists were said to attacked the properties belonging to the father of a leader in a rival cult group, located beside Omoleye hospital in Ogijo.
    It was learnt that the groups have had several clashes in the neighbourhood, destroying properties and valuables.
    The Nation gathered that the attacks have forced residents to flee their homes for fear of being hurt by the cultists.
    It was learnt that before the hoodlums set the house ablaze, they damaged two vehicles parked in the compound.
    They were said to have poured petrol on the building and lit it, keeping watch to ensure it was completely razed.
    But an eyewitness was said to have informed firemen at Ikorodu, who got to the scene on time to quench the fire.
    However, they were obstructed by the cultists, who threatened to burn the firemen and their truck if they do not vacate the premises.
    Confirming the development, the state fire service director, Rasaq Fadipe said the arson was reported at about 10:26am.
    “Someone ran to the station to report the outbreak and firemen moved to the site to contain it.
    “But some boys came around and halted firemen from quenching the fire. They threatened to burn the men and the truck if they don’t leave the site.
    “I do not know why they set the building ablaze but I learnt it belonged to the father of a rival cult member.”
    Fadipe also admitted that the fire service attended to a distress call at the Pan African University.
    According to him, the call was received at about 3:40pm, adding that the inferno started at the school’s diesel tank that supplies its generator.
    He said the fire destroyed the tank, the generator, as well as a PHCN cable.

  • Fire at Revenue Service office

    Fire at Revenue Service office

    Fire yesterday gutted the office of the Director of Finance of Lagos State Internal Revenue Service (LIRS) in Alausa, Ikeja, Lagos.

    Sources said the fire began from the director’s office on the second floor of the Good Shepherd Building housing LIRS around 8.30am. It is believed that the fire was caused by power surge.

    The fire destroyed some documents in the office and was put out before it spread.

    Workers, who scampered to safety, have since returned to their offices following the quelling of the fire.

    A statement by Ministry of Information and Strategy Permanent Secretary Fola Adeyemi thanked the Lagos State Fire Services for their prompt response.

    Adeyemi said the fire was caused by a default in the capacitor of an air conditioner.

    According to him, the immediate response of the fire fighters contained the fire to a room without loss of any vital document.

    “Similarly the quick response of the fire services and fire drills training put in place by the state government led to quick evacuation of staff.

    The only affected area was the newly renovated office which has not been allocated to any staff; the total span affected by the fire was not more than two metres in the entire office,” he said.

     

  • Explosion scene was gruesome, says survivor of P/Harcourt gas fire

    Following the death of four persons, including the shop owner, after an explosion which occurred inside a gas refilling shop, a lucky survivor, Mr. Antony Aguewo, has described the explosion as gruesome.

    The shop is located at Eliozu, near ABC Transport Company in Port Harcourt.

    Speaking with The Nation, Aguewo said: “I’m a new person here, and I don’t know the name of those who died. But the explosion happened few minutes after I left the place. As soon as I left the place, I heard a loud noise and when I turned back, I discovered that where I just left was on fire.

    “Two persons died on the spot, while another had his legs shattered. So many other people had varying degrees of injuries. When the police came, we assisted them to evacuate victims’ remains and those who need medical attention were taken to the Military Hospital and Braithwaite Specialist Memorial Hospital (BSMH).”

    The Rivers police Spokesman Muhammad Kidaya Ahmad, a Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP), confirmed the death of four persons in the incident.

  • Buhari appointments: Fighting  fire with fire

    Buhari appointments: Fighting fire with fire

    ABOUT one week after President Muhammadu Buhari made his last set of appointments, and raised quite a storm in the process, the controversy is threatening to become sectional. On August 27, the president had appointed six close staff, including the Secretary to the Government of the Federation and  the Chief of Staff, and heads of the Customs and Immigration. Many commentators and politicians, particularly from the Southeast, criticised the appointments, which they said were skewed, insensitive and sectional. President Buhari appointed those he could trust and who merited the offices they were given, argued his supporters, party and aides. The presidency further explained that the appointments were just starting, and no one, let alone ethnic groups, would be short-changed. When all is said and done, All Progressives Congress (APC) spokesmen enthused, everything and all the appointments would balance out.

    While it is uncertain that the Southeast could be persuaded by the president’s arguments, some northern groups have rallied robustly to his defence. One group in particular, the Concerned Elders of the North (CEN), flung in the public face a list of offices occupied by southeastern and South-South appointees under the Goodluck Jonathan presidency. In the CEN list, the Southeast and South-South virtually colonised the ‘commanding heights’ of both the economy and politics. In two ministries, for example, according to the list, the Southeast was shown to have suffocated other sections of the country, claiming that all appointments were done on merit.

    If the list were to be elongated, hinted CEN, some other startling facts could be unearthed, alarming and discomfiting very many people, including beneficiaries and victims of the arbitrariness of federal appointments in Nigeria. The CEN list came up with about 35 Jonathan federal appointments in almost perfect counterpoise to the 31 or so Buhari appointments. There seems to be some weird logic in fighting fire with fire, number with number, and zone with zone.

    But the exertions of the shadowy elders from the North were quixotic. Their list of the Jonathan era appointments was probably accurate but disturbing, just as the Buhari list has perplexed many and injured sectional feelings. Both lists speak ingloriously to the schisms disemboweling the country such that after many epochal crises, a civil war, and the ethical and material pillage undertaken by successive military regimes, lessons have not been learnt, nor have Nigerian leaders seemed capable of summoning the sensitivity, balance and altruism that the high offices they occupy demand.

    It is curious how history is repeating itself in the controversies accompanying the appointments. To answer allegations of skewed appointments under Dr Jonathan, the former Minister of Finance, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, argued passionately that merit and nothing else was responsible for the seeming slant. No one should blame the Southeast for being so successful in ‘meriting’ the appointments, she added in pained excitement. Explaining the current appointments, President Buhari and his aides have also suggested that nothing but merit was responsible for the slant so far. Merit, it seems, is the new boondoggle. It will be done to death in explaining appointments before this decade is over.

    As the country emerges from President Buhari’s controversial appointments and Dr Jonathan’s equally indefensible structuring of his presidency and federal establishments, the lessons of history may serve some useful purpose. Not too long ago in 1975, former head of state Gen Murtala Mohammed chose a young lieutenant, Akintunde Akinsehinwa, as his Aide-de-Camp. Since then an ADC has not been lower in rank than a Lt.-Col., and preferably ethnically closer home. It appears the journey to true nationhood will be long and turbulent. Nor are there guarantees, going by what Dr Jonathan and his predecessors and successors did, that the lessons history teaches will be learnt or even acknowledged.

  • Seven family members die in night fire

    Seven family members die in night fire

    SEVEN members of a family of eight were killed on Tuesday night when fire razed their self-contain apartment in Surulere, Lagos Mainland.

    The fire was caused by candlelight while the family was asleep.

    The lone survivor Chidinma (8) is lying critically ill in hospital.

    The dead are Kelechi Onoja, 28, his wife, Nkiru, 18, two children Favour, 2 and her three-week-old brother. Others are the late Onoja’s mother-in-law Mrs Okezie and her visiting two relatives.

    A neighbour, Uzor Alajemba, said he heard shouts of “help!” “help!!” “help!!!” from the apartment, adding that when he came out, smoke had filled the whole compound.

    He said: “I brought my family out of the house and called neighbours who alerted the fire fighters. I don’t how it happened. I just rescued my family.”

    Another resident, Tony Anslem said other tenants didn’t raise the alarm on time,noting that by the time fire fighters arrived, it was too late to rescue them.

    “We heard noise but we couldn’t rescue them because there was a burglar-proof at the entrance of the house. Nkiru’s mother was found burnt at the entrance of the door while trying to escape and the others were found on a mattress inside the room,” he said.

    The late Onoja’s sister, Obioma, in tears, said: “I live in Onipanu and I got the information this morning (yesterday), I was still happy that the house was burnt and not that they died until I got here. I don’t know what to do ooo! I am in shock. He is my younger brother. See the way my brother died.”

    Christiana Faleti, a resident, who took Chidinma to the hospital said: “Even before I came out, neighbours were busy pouring water from the ceiling because no one could access the entrance because of the burglar-proof. We rescued the girl from the toilet  after the fire was put out; a fire service official heard someone cough and sadly we saw a burnt little girl almost lifeless. The Lagos State Ambulance came to carry her and we took her to Gbagada General Hospital, around 3am, but on getting there, she wasn’t admitted because we had no money. So we came back home and neighbours gathered almost N50, 000 for her. I was scared. Her face has roasted. As a mother, I feel her pains.”

    The late Mrs Onoja’s brother, Michael Okezie, said their mother was to return to the village yesterday after babysitting her grandchild for a month.

    “Kelechi is my sister’s husband and we hail from Enugu State. He sells curtain materials on Lagos Island. I am sad. Why is it only their building that burnt? Why did the neighbours run away? These are questions I haven’t found answers to. Our mother went to the market on Tuesday to buy things for yesterday’s journey. We planned to see the baby this Sunday. There is more to this. Why didn’t they rescue them? Why?” he wondered in tears.

    [ad id=”403656″] Baale of Surulere, Kareem Awoyemi, said he learnt the tenants were not in good terms with the Onojas even before the incident.

    “They were not in talking terms with their neighbours; does that mean they shouldn’t rescue them. None of them came out. All of them ran away. I was informed around 3am that they needed money to treat the survivor, which I contributed. The building is over 23 years and we have never had such incident before. It is painful,” Awoyemi said.

    Another resident Ejike Eke-Opara said: “The fire was caused by candlelight because their light was disconnected few days ago because they couldn’t afford the prepaid meter. They were the only ones without light and they have been using candle. The occupants of this compound are terrible. Is it because they weren’t in good terms with them that they couldn’t try their best to save them? It didn’t affect the two buildings beside them. This is very strange.”

    A security guard, Desmond Mazeli, pleaded with government to take over the building because it was marked two months ago by the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA). He said since the landlord’s death, the building has been used for all sort of things, including drug trafficking.

    The bodies have been deposited in a morgue.

    Lagos State Fire Service Director Razak Fadipe appealed to people to desist from using candle in their homes, as it could be very dangerous.

  • Ekiti APC: compensate market fire victims

    Ekiti APC: compensate market fire victims

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Ekiti State has written to the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) to assist traders, who suffered losses when the Ado-Ekiti Main Market was gutted by fire in May.

    The former Speaker of the House of Assembly and a governorship aspirant, Femi Bamisile, who notified NEMA on behalf of the party, assured the traders that the agency would soon give them relief materials.

    He visited the market on an assessment tour at the weekend where he sympathised with the traders.

    The APC chieftain distributed petrol to about 250 commercial motorcyclists in the capital.

    He said the step became necessary, following complaints by the traders that some of them were excluded from the compensation package of the government.

    The ex-Speaker decried the government for the alleged selective compensation, which he described as “wicked and unpatriotic.” He condemned government’s plan to relocate the traders without giving them a viable alternative.

    Bamisile lambasted the Ayo Fayose administration for making the public to believe that the fire victims had been compensated.He said the APC-led Federal Government was responsive to the suffering of the masses, adding that it would do everything to make life easier for them.

    His words: “President Buhari’s government is for the masses. We won’t allow you to suffer just because your means of livelihood was consumed by fire.

    “I assure you that within the next 30 days, the relief will come. Our party would have done this earlier, but for the fact that the government publicised that you had been compensated. This deception shows the failure of governance and we will address it.

    “I have seen your pains and I have faith that the Buhari’s government to do the needful. The present government at the centre is different from other governments. The President runs a people-oriented programme and we are sure that the Federal Government will soon put smiles on your faces.

    “We have written to NEMA on your behalf and what I have seen here is as if the whole market was burnt. I have been told that 180 shops are affected and we will take an inventory of the goods that got burnt. My interest is to come and sympathise with you.”

    Two of the victims, Mrs Tijani Hafsat and Alhaja Taibat Bilau, who lost about N7 million property in the inferno, said they did not benefit from the state government compensation.

    They said they relied on trading as a means of livelihood and that it would be disastrous for them to be left without help.

  • DOMESTIC VIOLENCE Fire is the new weapon

    DOMESTIC VIOLENCE Fire is the new weapon

    Following the recent spate of cases of Nigerians setting their adversaries and enemies ablaze over domestic brawls, Gboyega Alaka beams a search light on the crime, highlighting recent cases and sampling out experts’ opinion on what could be responsible for  the rise of such heinous crime.

    In the past it used to be acid. That was how vicious people dealt with their adversaries; by pouring hot damaging acid on them, and deforming them perpetually. Psychologists say it gives them sadistic satisfaction and a feeling of perpetual victory. In truth, it did, as the victims carry the horrible scars for life and suffer in perpetuity, unless of course they’re lucky and the damage is minimal, or they could by some stroke of luck avail themselves of some kind of surgery or skin graft.

    But like everything, including science and technology, things seems to have ‘progressed’ dangerously. Suddenly, these vicious attackers no longer seem to get satisfaction through acid anymore. Like the devil himself, they now prefer to see their victims roast in the naked fire, and perhaps smell and savour their roasting skin – and perhaps watch life scream out of them. The latest method therefore is to decidedly douse their targets with petrol and then proceed to set them ablaze, lighting a stick of match.

    Blazing August

    In the last twelve months or thereabout, newspapers and the social media seems to have been agog with horrific news of Nigerians setting their neighbours, lovers and even spouses ablaze in broad daylight; mostly over jealousy issues, domestic arguments and brawls. The immediate past month of August may have unwittingly earned itself the appellation of ‘blazing August’, as it seems to have recorded the highest number of such cruelty in recent memory. Hardly did a week pass, without one or two such incidents grabbing the headlines, astounding a nation that seems to be already neck-deep in violence and other senseless killing.

    In one such incident, which occurred mid August in Ede, Osun State, a man whose identity was not immediately revealed, set ablaze his lover, Hadijat Adegoke, his rival, Lawal Muniru, who was said to be sleeping in the house with her on the night and her three children: Fawas (13), Sodiq (eight), and Fathia (six).

    The assailant was said to have been enraged by jealousy after discovering that the woman, Adegoke, said to be married but separated from her husband, was keeping another lover. Out of anger, he allegedly bought some petrol, poured it around the house, said to have been build for the woman by her friends, after she was sent packing by her husband, and set it ablaze, knowing fully well that Adegoke was in the house with her lover.

    The story further said that only one of Adegoke’s daughter, Ishwat, who did not sleep in the house that fateful night, was not caught in the fire and therefore escaped unhurt. All her three siblings suffered various degrees of serious burns and are lying critically ill at the Muslim Hospital, Ede, while Adegoke and her lover Lawal, were said to have died from burns sustained from the attack at the LAUTECH Teaching Hospital, Osogbo, where they were rushed for treatment.

    Another such daring incident that occurred in the second week of August in Idi Oro in Mushin, Lagos had hoodlums set a 17-year old boy on fire, after stabbing him severally, and living him to die. The boy, Lekan Agbaje, however got lucky, as he was rescued by passersby and policemen at the Alakara Police Station and rushed to a private hospital. It was also said that the hoodlums, believing he could never survive the attack, also pasted his obituary poster all over the area. Agbaje is said to be a member of a rival cult group and had been marked out for elimination.

    Just about the same time, precisely on August11, 22-year old Emmanuel Asuquo, an undergraduate of the University of Uyo was doused with petrol, set ablaze and roasted to death, for daring to report a series of daring attacks on his family by a neighbour, Jane Osasa, to the police, at the Ajeromi Police Station in Ajegunle.

    The neighbourhood brawl was said to have taken roots far back in March (2015), when a quarrel between Osasa and Mrs Asuquo, Emmanuel’s mother, left the latter with a gorge on her fore-head, as a result of a stab. The same Osasa also stabbed Emmanuel’s cousin, who was said to have come home to collect N4,000 for some examination fees from her uncle, a few days earlier (August 8).

    Curiously, the multiple assailant was said to be walking free and even threatening more violence on the hapless Asuquo family, causing the deceased’s father, Matthew Asuquo, to openly petition the Lagos State governor, Akinwumi Ambode on the plight of his family, as it seemed the police were not able to do much in terms of instituting justice and guaranteeing their safety.

    In a case of jungle justice, a mob in Calabar reportedly set a young man ablaze, after dealing him several machete blows, for allegedly robbing a woman of her pot of soup. The man, who was said to be in company of two others, was said to have attacked the woman on Mayne Avenue Extension in Calabar South, seizing her pot of soup in the process, until she raised an alarm and neighbours came to her rescue.

    The victim was said to have been unable to run as fast as his accomplices because of the pot of soup he was carrying, which he refused to drop. It was said that robbery attacks on the neighbourhood had become incessant; hence the neighbours took it upon themselves to send a strong message to the criminals.

    A few days before August, precisely July 27, Uchenna Ezeiro reportedly set her lover’s neighbour, Ifeoma Okwor, a 28-year old nurse ablaze in downtown Karmo, on the outskirt of Abuja, over arguments on the former’s hemp smoking habit.

    Ezeiro said to be boyfriend to Amaka, a next-door neighbour to Okwor in the tenement house, was said to be in the habit of smoking Indian hemp, anytime he came around, which Okwor was said to have repeatedly complained about, because the smoke and odour always streamed into her room and made her queasy.

    Things however got to a head on the morning of August 3, when Ezeiro started the smoking again, and Okwor took it up with her neighbour, Amaka; but whilst they were at it, Ezeiro was said to have been enraged by Okwor’s audacity and therefore proceeded to scoop petrol from a nearby generator, doused the unsuspecting Okwor, struck a match and immediately set her on fire.

    Help though immediate, came a bit too late, as burns sustained were said to be so severe that she was eventually transferred from the nearby hospital, where she was initially rushed, to the National Hospital, where doctors battled hard to save her life until she gave up the ghost on August 3rd.

    Reports have it that Ezeiro has been remanded in prison, pending subsequent court appearance, while Amaka, his lover, who was also arrested initially, has been set free.

    In Offa in Kwara State, a 14-year old girl, Mariam Adebisi was said to have been allegedly raped by one Mustapha Muritala, 22, and thereafter set ablaze.

    According to a police prosecutor during a hearing at a magistrate court, Adebisi was said to have been sent out by her mother to buy petrol from a nearby station on June 12, 2015 at about 4pm, when she was waylaid by Muritala, who after beating her into submission, tied her with her bra ropes, raped her, before spraying her with the petrol she went to buy and setting her ablaze.

     Also in that same month of June, a 60-year old man, Yakubu Vong, allegedly set ablaze an eight-year old girl (name withheld) at Sabon Layi in Barkin Ladi Local Government Area of Plateau State on suspicion of witchcraft.

    The old man, who was promptly arrested by the police and placed in custody, allegedly set the little girl ablaze, while urging her to confess to her involvement in witchcraft. It was said that her refusal to confess infuriated the old man, who promptly set the little girl ablaze.

    The girl was said to have died as a result of the burns suffered from the fire at the hospital.

    In April (2015), a woman, identified as Amina Dauda, was arrested and arraigned before an FCT High Court for allegedly setting her husband ablaze.

    According to the prosecution witness, Usman Idoko, Muhammed Matazu, a journalist was sprayed with petrol in his Gwarinpa residence in Abuja, and set ablaze. The reason behind the action was not immediately known, but neighbours were said to have struggled to save Mutazu’s life by taking him to three different hospitals, until he gave up the ghost.

    Not much justice

    Significantly, little has been heard of conviction of perpetrators of this heinous crime, even as cases continue to dot our news space. Perhaps, this is responsible for the impunity with which people have carried on with the crime.

    But in what looked like a welcome development, an Egor Magistrate Court in Benin, Edo State last Monday sentenced one Lucky Esonahae to five years imprisonment for setting his pregnant lover ablaze.

    The 37-year old was arraigned on a one count charge bothering on causing bodily harm to his lover, a crime he committed on July 6, 2015 at Uwelu Quarters in Benin. Prosecution witness, Sergeant Ganiyu Yahaya, said Esonahae poured kerosene on the seven-month pregnant woman’s head, lit a match and set her ablaze and locked her in a room.

    The victim was later rescued by one of her sons and neighbours, who forced the door open and rushed her to the Central Hospital, where she was treated for burns sustained on her hands and forehead.

    According to the prosecutor, Esonahae had accused the woman of infidelity after allegedly returning late from her ante-natal appointment at the hospital, and threatened to kill her.

    Even though the accused pleaded guilty, the presiding magistrate, Igho Braimoh, refused to be lenient, and therefore sentenced the 37-year old to five years in prison with hard labour.

    Applause for prompt judgment, but…

    While many have however welcomed the prompt delivery of justice in this case, since it took just about two months to dispense with the case, a good number of people have wondered at the tenderness of the judgement, considering the gruesome pain the poor woman must have gone though, the stigma of scar she will have to carry for the rest of her life, and the fact that she could have been killed.

    Professor Oloruntoba Elegbeleye of the department of psychology, faculty of Social Sciences, Obafemi Awolowo belongs to the latter group. According to Elegbeleye, “Even if you set somebody ablaze and she does not die in the process, it does not mean the person would not carry the scar for the rest of her life. And carrying a scar is always going to be a sad reminder that something terrible happened to her in the past, and this has a way of working up a negative psychology for the person.”

    He thus queried the quality of the nation’s law system and places the responsibility at the doorstep of the lawmakers. “That borders on the quality of law we have given to ourselves in Nigeria, and many people have been shouting that our laws and penalties need to be revisited. I think we need to take this back to the doorsteps of our lawmakers. If they can just wake up one day and make a law on homosexuality and impose 14 years, I want to agree that the sentence is too light.”

    Interestingly, some members of the public have advocated the Mosaic Law for anyone who dares to go to that length in dealing with their adversaries.

    About the Benin judgment, Nelson Ekujimi, a social commentator wrote on his facebook page that the man should have been burnt too, so he might know how it feels. To underline his annoyance at the judgment, he ended his posting with an outright insulting the convicted criminal by calling him, “Useless man.”

    Benjamin Omowale, who lives in Ajegunle and claimed he was aware of the Emmanuel Asuquo incident, said such incident will only begin to abate, if they know that they will also be burnt alive when they indulge in such wickedness.

    A psychologist’s explanation

    Asked what could cause people to adopt such extreme measure, as setting foes and adversaries on fire, to settle disputes, Professor Elegbeleye said, “It is about the dissipating issue of our value orientation. Using psychological terminology, there is what we call desensitisation. People are becoming desensitised to values we normally hold with sanctity, such as the human life, and this can be as a result of the fact that so very many things have robbed us of who we are as a people. One of them is the way our economy has been managed and the way our fortunes have been managed. So, very many people have been tilted towards the edge and are not able to control their temperament. People have been driven to the edge, and the threshold of anger has become so short. And where people have been so frustrated, they can resort to virtually anything, including setting people ablaze. So, I think basically something has happened to people’s psyche.

    Asked what satisfaction, such action can possibly give to the perpetrators, Prof Elegbeleye said most people who indulge in this kind of actions hardly border about the satisfaction or consequences. “When you allow yourself to be driven to the threshold of provocation, you do not begin to look at the consequences of your action. When you acted on the spur of the moment to satisfy that extreme uncontrollable urge to at least prove a point, you really do not look at justification.”

    He said the fact that things have degenerated to the extent that people believe they can get away with any crime, no matter how heinous, is not helping matters. “It’s just like boko haram killing people needlessly and without any justifiable reason; ethnic killers killing people and going scot-free; robbers invading our homes and going scot-free; this makes life cheaper, and people are beginning to believe that killing is now an option to solving conflicts – which shouldn’t be. But I believe the reason behind it is multi-faceted, not just mono-factored. So when you look at it against the backdrop of what is happening in our country, you begin to understand what is happening.

    For example, Elegbeleye said “If you have graduated for about ten years without a job, and then you manage to get yourself a wife and you’re not able to perform your roles as a bread-winner in the family, it might just happen that something might go off course. And in a way, you may not be responsible for what the consequences of your actions might be. So this is part of it, because I believe that if you wake up at the right side of your bed, you have a job to do, then you will begin to value human life and are not likely to go to that length in settling a conflict, especially if you’re responsible for the upbringing of your children and taking care of the home.

    Insanity as an excuse

    Asked what he thinks of arguments that people who go to that length can only do so because they’re mentally unbalance or because they believe they could hide under the clause of insanity, the renowned psychologist said when it is premeditated, there can be no excuse whatsoever.

    “There are times when it is premeditated. Every human being is capable of evil and it depends on what your motivations are. There are different types of homicides that are being committed on a daily basis at the level of the family, but because we don’t have efficient policing, we do not have a proper record system. Definitely, a person who went to buy petrol and even waited until midnight before executing his action actually planned for it. So that is a deliberate case of assault and murder.”

    Explaining further, he said “I can see that you’re harping on method, but it could have been a dagger. It could have been a gun. What is on the mind of a person who commits that kind of atrocity is that he wanted to eliminate. He probably has it at the back of his mind that the fellow must be eliminated in the harshest way possible; and it has nothing to do with wisdom or lack of it. And that decision, like I said earlier, may have come out of frustration; out of envy; or out of the fact that in the process of living together, something may have robbed the wrong way off the perpetrator; or out of the fact that the perpetrator might be a case of insanity. But we have to perform an insanity test on him, to determine that. In the case of the guy who went to buy petrol, don’t forget that he himself got burnt. So that may mean that he wasn’t in his right senses, especially if he is aware that he could be harmed in the process.”

    He said “All decisions that are premeditated, all decisions that are not taken on the spur of the moment, but are thought out are a function of a cognitive function of the individual. So it depends on what motivated you into doing it. If you have thought it out, there definitely must be something in it for you that made you do it, either to rob your ego, solve your financial needs or other extreme needs. And mind you in this country, if you’re talking of motivation, it does not exclude things like rituals and other things you might not even begin to fathom in the realm of logicality.”

    Asked if the recent rise in this kind of crime is not connected to the spate of impunity that seems to have taken over the nation’s socio-political space in recent time, Professor Elegbeleye said “Even before you finish your question, I say yes emphatically. You see because all over the country, there are pockets of terrible occurrences and our law processes are not efficient enough to bring people to book, I think people are getting more daring. So I think for a long time, we might have to live with this situation.

    A lawyer’s angle

    When asked to comment on the legal angle of such heinous crime, Adebamigbe Omole, a lawyer and former chairman of the Nigerian Bar Association, Ikeja branch, said “In most cases it depends on the degree of the burn. If perchance the burns result into death, then the perpetrator of such act is going to be charged with murder. If it is a hazard posing a threat to the life of the person, then it can be attempted murder. So that will determine the kind of punishment that will be meted out to the person at the end of the day. But if it is just a mere burn that poses no threat to life, then the sentence may be light. And you know that for murder, the punishment is capital punishment. The person will be hanged.”

    He however said there is no law per se that addresses people setting people ablaze. “As of the present moment, we do not have it in the statute book that ‘If somebody sets another person ablaze… such and such would be their penalty.’

    Barrister Omole said the charge will be prepared based on the degree of bodily harm to the victim, and if it results in death, then such incident would automatically have graduated to murder.

    “It is basically like fighting somebody and injuring that person by any other means, you may be charged with injury to the person; and if you give somebody a punch and the person falls down and die, then you will be charged with murder. So it depends on the degree of the injury.”

    On the possibility of pushing a specific law to address this crime, he said that can be done, “In which case it will now be said that if you set people ablaze, this is your sentence. But if you say if you set somebody ablaze, the punishment is 15 years, the question still arises that if you set somebody ablaze and the person dies, what happens? So the matter of the degree or outcome of the crime or bodily harm will still come up, because once it leads to death, it is murder and it is punishable by death.

    And regarding the possibility of hiding under the pretext of insanity, the former Ikeja NBA chairman said, “If a person claims insanity, there will be a need for a medical test; but even then, that will not mean that he will be set free. He will still be locked up in prison, pending the decision of the governor.”

    In conclusion, Elegbeleye inadvertently sounded a warning to would-be perpetrators of such evil: “There is nobody that can set somebody ablaze and go scot-free. It is not possible; as long as the person sustains injury, no matter how minor the injury may be and the case gets to the law court.”