Having served in the Nigeria Police Force for about
30 years, the plan of ASP Emmanuel Mbilla was to retire in 2018 after which he
would set up his own private security firm.
However, Emmanuel’s dream was cut short on February
22, 2014 after a life-changing encounter with a naval rating, Warrant officer
Unaji Enejor, in the Kirikiri area of Lagos State.
The 50-year-old victim was attacked in the eye by
the naval rating, causing him to lose his sight completely.
It was learnt that prior to the attack, Emmanuel’s
left eye had already been damaged by Glaucoma.
The victim’s landlady, Mrs. Olasumbo Agunbiade, who
witnessed the incident, told our correspondent that trouble started after
Enejor drove recklessly and rammed into Emmanuel’s wife’s shop.
She said, “I am the landlady of the property at 25,
Agunbiade Street, Kirikiri Town, Apapa. Emmanuel’s wife, Caroline, sells drinks
right in front of the house. Around 3.30pm on February 22, Emmanuel and his
wife were seated in front of the shop when a man in a red Honda car rammed into
their shop.
“When Emmanuel accosted the driver, the man
alighted from the vehicle and identified himself as a navy man and Emmanuel in
turn, identified himself as a police officer. The man wanted to leave but
Emmanuel told him that he could not leave without at least apologising and the
navy man just used his car key to poke Emmanuel in the eye.
“Emmanuel fell to the floor and started screaming,
‘I have lost my sight’. When the navy man saw the severity of the injury he had
inflicted on Emmanuel, he jumped into his car and sped off. However, as
residents were chasing him, he drove into a gutter and we arrested him.”
As residents were attempting to take Enejor to the
Kirikiri Police Station, two of his colleagues on a motorcycle, arrived the
scene and started beating the residents in a bid to rescue their colleague.
It was learnt that a few minutes later, the crowd
was able to overwhelm the navy men and the suspect was taken to the Kirikiri
Police Division but was later released.
However, there was no respite for Emmanuel who
was taken to about four hospitals where he was told that he may never see
again.
A medical report issued by the Eye Foundation
Hospital and signed by Dr. Olufemi Oderinlo, the Consultant Opthalmic
surgeon/Vitereoretinal specialist on March 3, stated that the victim would need
to be flown abroad for treatment for any hope of regaining his sight.
The report read in part, “At his (Emmanuel’s)
first visit, visual acuity in the right eye was light perception with poor
projection and no perception of light in the left eye. Examination of the
ocular adnexae revealed severe lid oedema, moderate ptosis, severe
sub-conjuctiva haemorrhage and chemosis with sustured multiple scleral
lacerations.
“Anterior segment examination revealed a deep
anterior chamber found with air, sutured cornea laceration and hyphema in the
right eye.
“The prognosis for vision following retina
attachment surgery was adjudged very poor and he was advised accordingly. He
desires to seek a second opinion abroad.”
The victim’s older wife, Patience, told PUNCH
Metro that life had been hard since her husband went blind.
Patience said her husband, who is attached to the
State Criminal Investigation Department, Yaba, required 24-hour monitoring and
this had affected the family.
She called on well-meaning Nigerians and the
government to come to their aid.
She said, “I am asking Nigerians, the government,
and especially that of Abia State to come to our aid. We are asking Senator
Uche Chukwumerije, who represents Abia-North, to help us. We have been
seriously affected and we have spent so much on my husband’s treatment. Also,
we are demanding for justice for my husband.
“The Commissioner of Police is aware of the
matter. Nobody is above the law. My husband did not fight the navy man but is
now completely blind as a result of a savage and brutal yet unprovoked attack.
Unfortunately, he was released while my husband was still in the hospital.”
The assailant, who works at the Obisesan Naval
Medical Centre as a radiographer, was released following a request letter
signed by Captain J.N. Manman for the Beecroft Naval Base, Apapa.
In a request letter dated February 26, the navy
requested that the errant rating be released as the matter was an “internal
affair”.
Meanwhile, our correspondent learnt that the
police had concluded investigations into the matter and sent the case file to
the Directorate of Public Prosecutions.
The DPP, in its report, stated that Enejor, with
number M4351, had a case to answer. However, the naval authorities have yet to
hand him over to the police.
When contacted, the Information Officer, Western
Naval Command, Lt. Commander, Abdulsalam Sani, said investigations into the
matter had commenced.
He said, “A report was made by the Nigeria Police
in February and a board of inquiry was set up to make its findings on the
matter and the culpability of the person. If the person is culpable, he will be
tried and an appropriate punishment will be given to him.”
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