Photo: Irawo, Ojia (In a pink dress) |
Ojia, the only surviving sister of the
27-year-old medical doctor, Irawo Adamolekun, who was shot dead in
traffic at the Anthony Village end of Ikorodu Road, Lagos, last Friday
said her brother was
not assassinated.
Ojia spoke to our correspondent outside
Our Saviour’s Church, Tafawa Balewa Square, Lagos on Thursday where a
funeral service was held for the deceased.
Ojia, also a medical doctor, said the
man who pulled the trigger and killed her younger brother must have been
one of the many frustrated young Nigerian youths.
She blamed Irawo’s death on the failure
of government at all levels to provide enabling opportunities for the
teeming unemployed youths in the country.
She said, “My brother was not
assassinated, I repeat, my brother was not assassinated. He was murdered
because the country failed the individual who held the trigger. He (the
gunman) who robbed my brother and killed him wasn’t given the
opportunity to go to school, he wasn’t given a job.
“Every citizen should be entitled to a
kind of job whether he or she is educated or an illiterate and if not,
the poor will continue to attack the middle class which my brother fell
into.
“I appeal to everyone to love one
another and help the less privileged in our midst and put an end to all
these (robbery attacks) because it might be your brother tomorrow.”
She added that her brother might have survived the attack if the emergency response system in the state was quick and effective.
She said, “I know the Lagos State
Government have some emergency points on some major roads and I hope
they are not just there for decoration. I believe that if emergency
services were immediately available he might have survived it.
“Meanwhile, some policemen fled the
scene of the incident when my brother was shot. I wonder why the police
want to interview me now and take my statements. Is that not medicine
after death? I really have some questions to ask them (police).”
Ojia, who wore a customised apparel of her medical consultancy firm, Quick Medical Consults, said Irawo was her next of kin.
PUNCH Metro learnt that Ojia
founded the medical firm in September 2010 after the death of her
immediate brother, Imole, who died in an auto crash in 2004 when he
couldn’t get an emergency medical care.
It was gathered that both Ojia and the
deceased offered free emergency and non-emergency medical services for
the poor, through the firm, in honour of Imole, who died as a medical
student of Igbinedion University, Okada.
Culled-Punch Metro
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So sad....R.I.P Dr Irawo Ademolekun
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