Four-year-old
Omonigho Abraham is currently battling for his life at the Lagos State
University Teaching Hospital, Ikeja, after his scalp was eaten by two
dogs.
The dogs chewed the skin and exposed the
victim’s skull during the attack which happened on Thursday on
Adegboyega Street, Akesan Estate, in the Igando area of Lagos.
Reporters had reported last week that the police seized the two dogs for attacking Omonigho.
However, our correspondent learnt from
eyewitnesses that the dogs dragged him through the compound for more
than one hour while policemen and sympathisers watched helplessly at the
entrance of the house for fear of being attacked by the savage dogs.
The immediate elder brother of the
victim, seven-year-old Osemudiamen, told our correspondent that the dogs
had chased him, Omonigho and their elder brother, Bobby, while they
were taking turns to ride a bicycle.
He said, “We were riding a bicycle in
the compound when the big dogs ─ Jack and Gadaffi ─ started barking at
us. Later, they moved towards us.
“My elder brother and I quickly ran upstairs and locked the door while Omo (Omonigho), who could not run fast, was left behind.
“When he got to the door, he knocked
that we should open for him and as we did, one of the dogs forced his
way into the house with him.
“We all ran out. Bobby jumped down from upstairs and I also jumped. But Omo could not jump, so the dog attacked him.
“The other dog also joined in the attack and there was nothing we could do.”
It was learnt that the screams of the
children who managed to get outside attracted passersby and residents
who besieged the house.
No fewer than seven policemen from the Igando Police Station reportedly stood at the gate, confused.
An eyewitness, who lived on the street,
but pleaded anonymity, said, “The police came, but said there was
nothing they could do. The dogs were growling as they ate the child
alive and that sent fear into everyone. Nobody could move inside to
challenge the dogs. Everybody was just shouting in confusion and
wielding sticks.”
The victim’s mother, Mrs. Helen Abraham,
who was away when the incident happened, said her son had been injured
by the time she arrived at the scene.
She said, “When I got there, I met a
crowd. They asked me not to go inside, but I refused to listen to them.
One of the dogs emerged from the corridor with blood stains in its
mouth. I ran inside. The other dog, on sighting me, pounced, but I
fought back. It later ran away. I called on people who joined me to take
him to a hospital.
“This has been a nightmare I want to wake up from.”
The victim’s father, Mr. Odia Abraham,
said the medical personnel at the Igando General Hospital asked them to
transfer him to LASUTH because of the severity of the attack.
“The doctor at Igando said his condition
was critical and we should take him to LASUTH. When the incident
happened, I was away at work.
“But when I got home, I saw parts of my
son’s scalp on the floor. The dogs dragged him through the compound for
about one and half hours and nobody moved near them. His face was also
affected, but thankfully it did not get to his eyes.
“His two brothers, who survived, also
got injured. The seven-year-old who spoke with you has a fracture, which
we are still treating. The other, who is 13 years, has a minor injury.
“We marked Omo’s fourth birthday in
June. He is a very intelligent boy and he always tells me he wants to be
a soldier because he loves to protect people. I am hoping this thing
will not affect his brain,” he said.
The police were said to have arrested the owner of the dogs, one Stanley Wesley.
A resident said the people living in the house had warned Wesley about his dogs but he refused to listen.
She said, “We became alarmed when he
brought a third dog recently which was more ferocious and bigger than
the others. Whenever he took that dog on a walk, even adults would be
scared.
“People told him to find a place to keep
his giant dogs, but he refused to listen. It was the new dog that first
followed those children into the house.”
When our correspondent visited the Burns and Plastic Ward of LASUTH, he was told the victim was asleep.
The matron in charge of the ward told
our correspondent she would not comment unless the Public Relations
Officer of the hospital gave an approval.
However, the PRO was said to be unavailable as he was on leave.
A medical officer, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the victim’s condition was “serious and critical.”
The Police spokesperson, Lagos State Command, DSP Kenneth Nwosu, said the police were the ones that actually rescued the victim.
Nwosu said, “I can confirm to you that
on September 25, at about 5.40pm, dogs belonging to one Stanley Wesley
attacked and harmed a four-year-old boy and the matter was reported at
the Igando Police Division.
“The report from the Divisional Police
Officer indicated that the dogs were being kept to undergo some tests,
while their owner had been arrested. The report that the police did not
do anything is not true.”
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