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EndSars: Victim to Lose a Leg to Police Brutality

Lagos State Judicial Panel on Restitution For Victims of SARs Related Abuses and Other Matters has heard how the deteriorating health of a victim of police brutality, Gloria Ezeh, may lead to amputation.

At the resumption of hearing of Gloria Ezeh’s case, a surgeon at the National Orthopedic Hospital, Igbobi, Chungjoe Christopher, told the Panel that Mrs Ezeh stood the risk of leg cancer and amputation after her experience in the hands of the Police.

Mrs Ezeh, a middle-aged woman, had earlier approached the panel and narrated how a police officer ran over her leg with a van because she could not pay a bribe of one hundred thousand naira.

After her testimonies, Mrs. Ezeh’s lawyer, John Nwoku, prayed the panel to summon the orthopaedic surgeon as a witness in the matter.

Mr Christopher, who is a consultant orthopaedic and trauma surgeon, was led in evidence by Mr. Nwoku.

In his testimony, the surgeon told the panel that Mrs. Ezeh sustained a roll-over injury on the foot, which led to missing bone, compromised soft tissue envelope, as such the tendons had to be removed.

He showed the panel pictures from a flash drive and the scan to buttress his point.

The surgeon explained that Mrs. Ezeh, who experienced the police brutality fifteen years ago, still suffered the pain of an infected leg and unequal limb because she had not accessed quality health care.

Although her conditions could be corrected through surgery, the doctor said the petitioner had not been able to meet up with the cost, which is between 4 and 5 million naira.

“She requires a surgery to remove the infected tissue and perform a reconstruction. She needs bone excision to equalise limb leg. Amputation is a possibility if she is cancerous,” he told the panel.

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Narrating her ordeal to the panel at the last proceedings, Mrs Ezeh said she met with the “brutal” police officers on June 23, 2006, on her way back from Okokomaiko where she went to purchase products for her business.

The petitioner said she had a shop at Agric bus stop, Ikorodu, and she is a wholesaler dealing in cooking products, majorly groundnut oil.

“On June 23, 2006, I was coming back from Okokomaiko where I went to buy groundnut oil for my shop. It was already late and getting to Mile 2, police arrest the driver that carried my goods and demand money from him.”

Mrs Ezeh explained that the driver told the police he didn’t have money and pleaded with the police from 9p.m. to 12 a.m., but the officers did not listen.

“The driver told me the police want to collect N100,000. I said N100,000 for what. They collected the key from the driver and said I should come out and enter their van. As I enter their van, I asked the police what is the problem and he said when I get to the station, I will know what the problem was,” she said.

The petitioner said on getting to the Olodi Apapa station, the patrol officers that took them drove off and handed her to another officer, called Inspector Ayeni.

“The officer still asked for N100,000. I said it is only N5,000 I have with me and he said no. I said we are going to Ikorodu and the place is far.

“They said I should go away from the police station, I said it is already 12 midnight, and that they should put me inside cell to pass the night. So that I call my people to bring money in the morning.

Mrs Ezeh said the officer insisted that she leaves the station that midnight and she knelt down begging Mr Ayeni that Ikorodu was a far distance.

“What I just saw is that the man started the vehicle, that if I don’t go away from there he will kill me. I was still pleading that he should lock me inside the cell, before I know it, he crushed my leg with the vehicle. The other man (driver) jumped, I didn’t know the vehicle was near me, that was how he ‘pieces’ my leg and I was shouting,” she narrated.

Mrs Ezeh said she was rushed to a nearby hospital but there was no one to attend to her before she was taken to another hospital where she was treated and later discharged before she went to Igbobi.

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Stating her demands, Mrs Ezeh pleaded with the panel to investigate the matter and bring the officer that caused her a lifelong injury, Mr Ayeni, to book.

She also asked the panel for a financial relief of N13 million to cater for surgery, medical treatments and other expenses she requires to correct the leg.

Mrs Ezeh also urged the panel to compensate her for the trauma she has suffered in the past 15 years, adding that she has been impoverished by the conditions.

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Akinlade I. WAHAB is a dedicated journalist and the proprietor of I-WAHAB Media. He embarked on his career at Murhi International TV (MiTV) and subsequently joined Radio Nigeria as a Judicial Correspondent.With a profound interest in legal reporting, he currently holds the positions of Chairman at the National Association of Judicial Correspondents (NAJUC), Ikeja Branch, and Chairman at the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ), Radio Nigeria Chapel.As the owner of I-WAHAB Media, he has successfully established Top Court News, a platform renowned for providing comprehensive coverage of court cases and legal developments, with the aim of promoting transparency within the judicial system.Akinlade's diligent work and unwavering commitment to ethical reporting have earned him immense respect within the Nigerian journalism community.

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