Student dead after slap from Principal’s secretary
Nine months after, the family of Miss
Iyanuoluwa Dahunsi are still haunted by the incident that led to their
daughter’s tragic, but preventable death.
The late pupil, then an SS2 pupil of
Bishop Philip Academy, Ibadan, Oyo State, was hospitalised after she was
reportedly slapped by Mrs. Funke Fashina, who was then the secretary to
the school’s principal, on January 29, 2015.
Dahunsi developed an eye problem that
same day. And despite frequent visits to different hospitals for
treatment and medication, the affected eyeball kept bulging out every
day.
Although Fashina was later arrested and charged to court for the slap, the affected pupil, sadly, never recovered from it.
Barely six months later, and five days
after her fifteenth birthday, Dahunsi died on July 22, 2015 at the Lagos
University Teaching Hospital.
An aunt to the late pupil, Mrs. Yetunde
Orindare-Ajayi, recalled, “A few days before Dahunsi’s death, she was
referred to the University of Benin Teaching Hospital, but she died on
the day we were to travel there. She died in my hands at the hospital.
On her birthday on July 17, she requested that I cooked fresh fish for
her, but she could barely eat it. She suffered so much before her
death.”
Due to a mounting hospital bill
estimated to be more than N1m, her corpse was not released at the morgue
to her family until Oyo State Governor Abiola Ajimobi intervened seven
months later.
As a result, the late Dahunsi, who was the older of her parent’s two children, was only buried on February 12, 2016.
However, in an unexpected twist, last
Thursday, Orindare-Ajayi, who spoke on behalf of the deceased’s mother,
said the process of withdrawing the case from court had begun, and even
though the date of the next hearing was scheduled for April 29.
Orindare-Ajayi noted that the
intervention of Governor Ajimobi and the fact that no favourable ruling
from the court would bring back their daughter made the family to
consider withdrawing the case from the court.
Their decision to withdraw the case from
court nevertheless, the late pupil’s aunt said the family are still
bearing the pain from the events that led to her hospitalisation and
death.
She said, “She was always with me and
even when the incident happened, she was living with me. Her mother is
my sister. That was why I referred to her as my daughter.”
In an emotion-laden voice, a family
friend of the Dahunsis, who preferred anonymity and said he had signed
the release form of the deceased corpse, recalled, “We learnt that on
that day (January 2015), a teacher entered her classroom and ordered
those who were not taking the subject to leave. She was leaving with
some of her friends when the school principal’s secretary, Mrs. Fashina,
met them along the corridor.
“Instead of asking the pupils questions
about their mission outside the classroom, she began to beat them one by
one. In the process, her hand hit Dahunsi’s eye. She did not take it
seriously but she told her aunt (Orindare-Ajayi), who she was living
with at the time when she got home. Her aunt told her that she must have
done something wrong which warranted the discipline.
“However, she bought eye drop and
applied it to the affected eye. There was mid-term break at the time but
before the school resumed again, the eye had gone worse. The mother
visited the school to demand for what Fashina used to slap her daughter.
There was an argument over the issue but when her father also visited
the school, it was resolved that a test be carried out at an optical
laboratory in Eleta area of Ibadan.”
He said the result showed there was a
fracture around the eye, which also resulted in clotting of blood around
the affected area. He noted that the principal and Fashina rejected the
result because it implicated the woman who had slapped Dahunsi.
The family friend added, “They said they
had someone at the University College Hospital(UCH) and demanded that
another test be carried out at the UCH. According to the new scan
result, a tumour was detected and that it was not as a result of the
slapping. The consultant said the sum of N300,000 was needed to do a
surgery. The result was in the custody of the principal and Fashina.
“The parents agreed that the surgery be
done, but the necessary document needed by the hospital was not released
by the principal and the secretary. The police had to be involved
before the document was released three days after. By then, the girl had
suffered so much.”
The case, he noted, was compounded by
the inability of the parents to raise the amount needed for surgery
immediately and the refusal of Fashina or the school to help, claiming
that the new scan had exonerated the woman.
The surgery was later carried out after
the Chief Medical Director of UCH, Prof. Temitope Alonge, was notified
by Dahunsi’s aunt. By then, more damage had been done. Her head had
swollen and she could no longer see with the affected right eye.
At the Lagos University Teaching
Hospital, where she was later referred to, Dahunsi’s condition grew
worse as she could no longer walk, her parents said she was also using
diaper. She spent her 15th birthday on the hospital bed and in
unbearable pain.
Orindare-Ajayi said she had taken
Dahunsi’s picture on the bed and displayed it at Mushin market to raise
money for her treatment.
“We sold everything we had to treat her
and when there was nothing to sell again, we were using her picture to
beg for money in Mushin area of Lagos and at the hospital gate. Before
coming to Lagos, Seyi Makinde gave us money but everything was spent at
UCH.
“Because she could not move around
again, we were using adult diapers for her. We were buying six pieces
for N2,500. One of her daily injections cost N3000 and she took four in a
day. I have all the receipts,” she said.
Orindare-Ajayi told our correspondent
that the family didn’t initially wish to take the matter to court, but
the attitude of the school and that of Fashina informed the decision of
the police to charge the secretary to court.
She said, “I reported the case at
Adelubi police station in Alakia area of Ibadan when it was obvious that
the school principal was shielding the secretary who slapped our
daughter. When I went to the school, I said I was only interested in how
the girl would be treated but the school did not let me meet her. It
was when the police got involved that she was brought out.
“Her husband went to the station to
insult the policemen so the Divisional Police Officer decided to
transfer the case to the State Criminal Investigation Department in
Iyaganku.”
Orindare-Ajayi said that it was more painful that until Dahunsi’s death, Fashina did not apologise or visit her in hospital.
She said, “Neither Fashina nor any of
her relative visited us in the hospital or send anything to her. After
her death, the charge against Fashina was changed to murder.
“The day of the next hearing date in
court is April 29 but we have decided to withdraw the case from court.
We felt that it was useless pursuing the case and moreover, Governor
Ajimobi had intervened. Victory at the court will not revive our
daughter who has gone to the lord to rest. The process of withdrawing
the case began last Thursday.
“Our daughter was a lovely, honest and
adorable child. Apart from her schooling, she was also training to
become a fashion designer. She would have completed it soon if she had
not died. Our solace is that she had Christ. If Fashina did not slap her
in the eye, she would be alive today,” she said.
When contacted, the school principal,
Iyabo Oladepo, told our correspondent on the telephone that her position
as a civil servant did not allow her to speak on the matter, especially
after the state government had waded in. She also said she no longer
had anything to do with the case.
Efforts to reach Fashina failed as everyone close to her refused to give our correspondent her number.
Also, the Public Relations Officer of
the Oyo State Police Command, Adekunle Ajisebutu, told our correspondent
on Friday that he had yet to be notified of the family’s decision to
withdraw the case from court.
Speaking on behalf of the governor on
the matter, Ajimobi’s Senior Special Assistant, Print and Broadcast
Media, Akin Oyedele, said the concerned employee (Fashina) was retired
from service while the principal was also transferred after being found
culpable. He said the government would not condone any act capable of
tarnishing the image of the state government.
He said, “The government is again using
this opportunity to pray for the repose of the soul of the deceased and
for the Almighty to grant the parents and her loved one the fortitude to
bear the sad loss.
“Those allegedly found to be culpable in
the incident that culminated in the hospitalisation of the deceased
have been sanctioned by the state’s Teaching Service Commission after
thorough investigation.
“The support staff at the centre of the
incident was retired compulsorily by TESCOM after due process had been
followed, while the principal was moved to another school, having been
found not to be directly complicit.”
He added, “Admission of corporal
punishment has rules, regulations and procedures, which is known to
every stakeholder in the school system; a violation of which will not be
condoned under any guise. We are using this opportunity to again remind
all school heads to follow these rules and regulations to the letter
before subjecting any pupil to corporal punishment in order not to incur
the wrath of the government.”
Source: Punch Newspaper,Nigeria
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