A woman made quite an impression in Jos, the capital of
Plateau State, Wednesday when she recounted how she died from the impact of the
first bomb blast but rose from the “dead” within a few minutes following the
second explosion.
As she recounted her harrowing ordeal in the assault that
has so far claimed 75 lives, Mrs. Funke Oloyede, an ample Yoruba lady in her
early 40s, who is a survivor of the twin blasts that rocked the city Tuesday,
said she “died” and rose, and then almost died again before she was rescued and
taken to the hospital.
Oloyede, who had been admitted at the Jos University
Teaching Hospital (JUTH) where she was recovering from the shock of the
experience, said: “I was in the front of my customer’s shop buying some shoes
for my children, when suddenly I heard a loud and deafening blast that shook
the market to its foundation.
“And being a high blood pressure patient, my blood pressure
shot up and I collapsed immediately. I thought I was dead. My confused customer
could not help me as she scampered for safety too.
“As I lay down there dead and looking for help, the second
and louder blast went off and buildings started collapsing, which engulfed the
entire market in total darkness.
“I then realised it was not time to lie down dead. So I
woke up and crawled towards a nearby pole with which I supported myself to
stand up and managed to wade through the darkness into the light.
“Then, I collapsed again, but this time in a place where
people could help me. This was how I found myself in the hospital. I have no
injury on my body; my problem was entirely that of shock.”
Speaking about the casualties at the state Specialist
Hospital, the information officer of the hospital, Mrs. Talatu Angi, said the
hospital had received 55 corpses and 35 injured patients from the blast, adding
that the hospital was working at full capacity to cope with the pressure.
At the hospital, there was a large crowd searching for their loved ones. Some ended up seeing corpses of family members, others saw their injured relations, while the rest hurried away to other hospitals to continue their search.
At the hospital, there was a large crowd searching for their loved ones. Some ended up seeing corpses of family members, others saw their injured relations, while the rest hurried away to other hospitals to continue their search.
Students of the University of Jos also raised the
alarm that they had not seen many of their colleagues.
One of the patients in the hospital, Miss Hadiza Ajiji, who
narrated her ordeal, said: “I was inside a Keke (tricycle) with two other
passengers when the bomb went off and threw the Keke to the opposite side of
the road. We were all thrown out as the Keke was lifted by the blast.
“That was all I knew when I became unconscious. I don’t
know what became of the other passengers; I only regained consciousness here in
the hospital.”
Ajiji said she had gone to the market on Tuesday to shop
for her brother’s wedding. The doctor on duty said she would have to be
operated upon as the flesh in her legs had all been taken off.
Ibrahim Yunusa, at the Bingham University Teaching
Hospital, whose stomach was ripped open thus forcing out the intestines out of
his charred stomach, was immediately wheeled into the theatre for surgery. He
was amazed he is still alive: “When I saw my stomach giving way and my
intestines pouring out, I thought that was my end. But these doctors did
miracles to bring me back to life.”
He said he was inside a moving bus when the bomb went off
and shattered the vehicle.
Mr. Stanley Edward Ngene, a shoe seller whose forehead was pierced by an iron rod, said he got injured while he was trying to escape from the confusion that ensued at the scene.
Mr. Stanley Edward Ngene, a shoe seller whose forehead was pierced by an iron rod, said he got injured while he was trying to escape from the confusion that ensued at the scene.
Meanwhile, rescue and emergency workers yesterday cleared
and combed through the rubble of the bomb attacks in which the federal
government said 75 people were killed.
Emergency services picked through the burnt-out remains of vehicles and collapsed buildings in the New Abuja Market area of the city, where two car bombs exploded within 20 minutes of each other on Tuesday.
Emergency services picked through the burnt-out remains of vehicles and collapsed buildings in the New Abuja Market area of the city, where two car bombs exploded within 20 minutes of each other on Tuesday.
In Jos, where Boko Haram had attacked before, the
governor’s spokesman said the bombing bore the hallmarks of the Islamist
extremists.
“This is not a Berom-Fulani attack,” Pam Ayuba told AFP,
referring to the long-standing ethnic violence between Christian farmers and
Muslim herdsmen that has claimed tens of thousands of lives in the state in the
last two decades.
“The investigation is still ongoing but this is clearly an
extension of the terrorist activity that has affected the North-east of the
country, the Boko Haram insurgents,” he added.
Kyari Mohammed, a Boko Haram specialist and Chairman of the Centre for Peace Studies at Modibbo Adama University in Yola, Adamawa state, also blamed the Islamists. “They’re the only ones capable of doing this. Every other rebel or fringe group can use bombs but not of this scale or sophistication,” he said.
Kyari Mohammed, a Boko Haram specialist and Chairman of the Centre for Peace Studies at Modibbo Adama University in Yola, Adamawa state, also blamed the Islamists. “They’re the only ones capable of doing this. Every other rebel or fringe group can use bombs but not of this scale or sophistication,” he said.
“I have the feeling that what they want to achieve is to
escalate things because of the international pressure which has built up
(because of the kidnapping),” he added.
Rescue workers were among those who were caught up in the
Jos bombings. As they tended to the injured from the first blast, then the
second detonated. Improvised explosive devices (IEDs) were hidden in a minibus
and truck, the military said.
Owing to the twin blasts, Jos streets were deserted
yesterday, with an uneasy calm pervading the air.
Seven
UNIJOS students among dead victims
Seven
final-year students of Medical Laboratory Science of the University of Jos
(UNIJOS) were among the dead victims of Tuesday’s twin bomb blasts in Jos,
Plateau State.
An
eyewitness, who is also a final-year student of the department, Ms Eku Vivan
Ijeoma, told LEADERSHIP that the students had just finished their lectures at
the Old Campus of Jos University Teaching Hospital (JUTH) and were heading home
when they were caught in the bomb blast that killed them instantly.
Ijeoma
said the corpses of four of the slain students had been identified by family
members.
Their
names, she said, are: Michael Ogbote, Francisca Nwafor, Lydia Komolafe
Dolapo, Milly Yusuf, Doris Gegunem, Vivian Chiamaka Obilor, and Wungak.
She
appealed to the federal government to do everything possible to end the
insecurity in the country that has already claimed thousands of lives.
She
said: “What happened on Tuesday was unprecedented. We had just finished our
lectures and they were ahead of me when they were suddenly caught in the
blasts. I was lucky to escape unhurt from the incident.”
Adiza
Mohammed Nyam, 25, was in the market making her purchase and was about going
home when the first blast went off. According to her, she was unconscious,
having suffered severe burns on her two hands and some other parts of her body.
Nyam
added that immediately the blast occurred she could not hear because she was
very close to the scene and the sound blocked her ears. She added that she only
realized she was in the hospital early yesterday morning with her two hands and
body in bandage and a swollen eyelid.
She
also appealed to the federal government to ensure that it offsets the bills of
those that are receiving treatment in the various hospitals, as well as
compensate the families of those who lost their lives in the blast.
For
Ruquyatu Abubakar Mohammed, who was lying critically ill on the bed with her
two legs bandaged, she could not utter a word to our correspondent. Her son who
stood by her bedside told LEADERSHIP that his mother was passing by when the
first blast occurred and a shrapnel from the blast pierced into her two legs,
but she was rescued and taken to the hospital. He added that, after a serious
search for her, she was discovered at the Plateau Specialist Hospital.
Selina
from Shendam local government area of Plateau State was selling roasted corn in
the area when the blast occurred. She had her left leg badly injured and was on
wheelchair at the accident emergency unit of the Plateau Specialist Hospital
Jos when LEADERSHIP visited the hospital.
Meanwhile,
following the twin bomb blasts that occurred around the Terminus Market in Jos,
business activities have closed down in the affected areas.
LEADERSHIP
investigations revealed that shops around the ever-busy Terminus Market
remained closed, even as passers-by too avoided the area. Roads leading to
those areas were closed by security operatives.
At
the University of Jos, both the Old Campus along Bauchi Road and the permanent
site, students deserted lectures and other academic activities.
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