Residents of Utuh Street, Araromi Quarters at Ketu area of Lagos were
plunged into mourning, following the death of a woman while trying to
save the lives of her two children.
The woman, Mrs Bashirat Rauf, was
not the only person who died on the fateful day. Another resident
identified as Sodiq Saka also died while trying to ensure that others
did not die in a fire outbreak.
The fire was said to have started after two high-tension cables fell
on a school building in the area, sparking an inferno. Residents who
mourned Rauf and Saka also gave thanks to God, saying that many school
children would have died but for the Sallah break. Surprisingly, Rauf
and Saka, who were trying to save people died, while those they tried to
save are alive. When our correspondent went to the area, it was
gathered that Bashirat’s husband had gone out. A resident, however,
attempted to recapture how the woman died on September 24. The resident
said: “Bashirat has two kids; a boy and a girl.
The kids were playing outside when the high-tension cables fell and
caused fire. The school is close to residential homes. Bashirat ran out
of her apartment, screaming for her two kids. As she rushed to pick
them, she stepped on one of the cables. When people realised that she
was electrocuted, they screamed, but there was nothing anybody could
have done.
The two kids are still alive. Nothing happened to them, but Bashirat
died.” Saka, who many described as a Good Samaritan, was also
electrocuted. According to some residents, when Saka noticed the raging
fire in the school compound, he dashed out of his apartment and
frantically searched for a bucket to fetch water.
The thought in his mind was how to arrest the fire from spreading to
other buildings. He had already fetched the water and was making his way
towards the burning building when he also stepped on a cable. He died
instantly. Saka’s grieving father, Imam, said: “As a Muslim, I have
accepted my fate. There is nothing I can do to bring the dead back to
life.
Sodiq was the person who slaughtered the Sallah ram he bought for me
on that day. When he was through with the ram, he told me he was going
to get something down the street. A few minutes later, someone rushed to
tell me that my son had been electrocuted in the neighbourhood.
“I was told that my son only went into the school premises where it
was burning to assist in battling the fire, only for him to be
electrocuted. What can I do now? Is it possible for me to give birth to a
30-yearold again?” The Secretary of Araromi Community Development
Association, Mr Wahab Awoyemi, said it was a very sad day for all
residents after the community lost two persons in a day.
He said: “We made frantic efforts to rescue both of them, but it was
to no avail. We rushed to the Eko Distribution Company office at Mile
12, to switch off the power, but the person who was supposed to switch
off the power was not on duty. “They (the victims) were later taken to
hospital, but pronounced dead by doctors. We want government to come to
our aid in the community. We are suffering. We have no accessible road.
This affected the timely arrival of firefighters.”
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