Got this tragic news from Punch Newspaper today and thought i should share with you. May we not share in any generational curse from any of our relations.
The news
that a young boy died from dog bite three years after his father also died from
a similar cause would make many people curious. But this is the tragic story
that has unsettled Mologede Estate, an unplanned but tranquil neighbourhood in
the Meiran area of Lagos.
James Musa,
a boisterous 13-year-old had relocated to Lagos from Abuja, after a rabid dog
fatally bit his father in the Federal Capital Territory. On the often deserted
inner roads in the estate, Musa and his teenage friends played football. They
would shoot the ball into any neighbouring house where residents would scream
at them to get them right back on the streets.Continue
With three
deaths in a spate of one month, even a Nollywood tragedy script cannot be
grimmer. During a visit to the estate on Friday, our correspondent learnt,
however, that Musa might still be alive if he had told his aunt and her husband
of the real cause of the scratch just below his right eye. But he did not.
It was also
learnt that the cycle of deaths did not start with Musa. Jerry, a huge Alsatian
dog owned by the Ogundiran family living in the estate, allegedly caused the
string of deaths, which by now has Musa, Jerry and Aishat Opakunle, a
21-year-old National Diploma graduate on its list. Jerry’s owner, identified
simply as Mr. Ogundiran, and his family had allegedly fled the community since
news of the first death broke.
A community
of amorphous cottage houses, Mologede Estate is home to a cluster of middle
class families whose buildings are mostly modest, unpainted and without a fence.
The Opakunle’s house on No. 114A is just beside No 115A where Jerry lived with
the Ogundiran family. Both houses are without a fence and so it was not unusual
for the dog to move into the next compound. Neighbour’s accounts had it that
the dog was a frequent sight on the road and in Opakunle’s shop where Aishat
usually fed him with crumbs of food.
Things went
awry last month when Musa allegedly touched the dog while playing with friends
in No. 113A. Jerry was said to have jumped on him, mauling the boy just under
his right eye. Unknown to its owners and neighbours, the Alsatian was not done
with its deadly mission. Without provocation, it bit Aishat on her right palm
on the night of the same day it attacked Musa.
Narrating
the incident to our correspondent, Musa’s aunt, Mrs. Racheal Daudu, expressed
sadness at the turn of events. According to her, Musa was a promising child who
just passed his Junior School Certificate Examination. She blamed the wife of
the dog’s owner for not disclosing to neighbours that it had rabies.
“It was a
very sad incident. Musa did not tell us that a dog bit him. He said he fell and
we believed him. It was only after Aishat died that he told us that the dog
that bit the aunty that died also bit him. The whole thing happened in July.
Musa did not confess until Aishat died one month after. Then he complained of
headache and fever and we gave him some drugs. That was the Tuesday that
followed the Friday on which Aishat died. He even went out to play football
that same day.
“But when I
came back, I met him lying down. Up till the time he died, he kept saying it
was the woman (Mrs. Ogundiran) that misled him. We rushed him to the hospital,
but it was too late. He started saying nonsense. He would have been 14
years-old next month. He was my sister’s son. He came to live with us three
years ago after his father also died from dog bite,’’ she recalled.
While the
Daudus appeared to be slowly taken the tragedy in their stride by talking to the
press, the Opakunles on the other hand are still numb with grief. When our
correspondent knocked on their door, a middle-aged woman suspected to be
Aishat’s mother was eager to go back to her closet.
“We don’t
have anything to say on the matter. The story is true but we don’t have
anything to say,’’ she said in Yoruba.
Neighbours
were less hesitant however. One of them, a young lady who claimed to be
Aishat’s friend spoke, on condition of anonymity, about Aishat’s dreams. She
said that having completed her National Diploma programme, the deceased was in
the process of registering as a Computer Engineering student at the Moshood
Abiola Polytechnic, Abeokuta, Ogun State.
“She was a
very nice and outspoken person. I don’t believe she did not tell anybody that a
dog bit her because she was an adult. In fact, she was first taken to a nurse
who came to ask the woman (Mrs. Ogundiran) if Jerry had rabies and she said no,
that the dog just came back from the hospital after receiving vaccination.
“Everyone in
the neighbourhood believed her. We did not know that the dog died from rabies
five days after it bit Musa and Aishat. Yet, she did not disclose this. By the
time we all got to know that the dog had rabies and had died, Aishat had
started manifesting the symptoms. She fell ill on Wednesday and by Thursday she
was already barking and never allowed treatment,’’ she narrated in a voice
soaked with sadness.
Observations
from Aishat’s friend are consistent with expert’s view on the symptoms of
rabies. According to the Chairman, Nigerian Veterinary Medical Association,
Lagos State Chapter, Dr. Alao Mobolaji, rabies is a fatal disease that should
be treated within hours of infection. Mobolaji, who was contacted by the
management of the hospital where Musa died, expressed regrets about the
incident.
“I was with
him (Musa) the day before he died and he even spoke with me. Children are the
most vulnerable when it comes to rabies and it is a highly preventable
infection. From the animal angle, there are vaccines to prevent it and also
from the human angle there are also relevant vaccines. Once you know there is a
dog bite, you have to be given prophylactic treatment immediately. But once a
person starts to show the symptoms, there is little or nothing anybody can do
once the virus has got into the nervous system. That is why you observe
hallucinations, while the person starts to bark like a dog and the patient will
also be afraid of water. The sight of water will set the patient on edge,’’ he
explained.
Mobolaji
said the hospital exhumed the dog’s corpse for medical examination. “We are
through with the first phase and we are waiting for the confirmatory result
showing that the dog, indeed, had rabies,’’ he added.
The animal
doctor also expressed concerns about the indiscriminate rate of dog ownership
without a commensurate monitoring efforts from government. He called on
relevant authorities to establish an animal registry and a tagging system as a
precondition for pet ownership in the state.
He further
explained that an annual anti-rabies vaccination is compulsory for dogs, adding
that Jerry could have been infected by other dogs, chimpanzees and bats in the
area.
“We asked
Musa’s uncle if there are bats in the areas and he said yes, that he had once
sighted a dead bat in his compound. The area may be a migratory route for bats.
This is one of the reasons why we are saying let us have an animal registry in
the state. Even if a dog gets lost, it will be easier to reunite the dog with
its owner through the tagging system,’’ he asserted.
Meanwhile
the Ogundiran family has vanished from the Estate. Silence greeted our
correspondent when she visited their apartment. A look around the compound
however showed an abandoned sign post indicating Mr. Ogundiran as a bore hole
specialist. He picked his calls when our correspondent called the line embossed
on the signpost and his apartment.
“Normally, I
don’t speak to journalists but I have to in this matter. Nobody knew the dog
had rabies because it was not manifesting any symptoms. We were not even aware
that the dog bit the boy. We only knew that it bit Aishat around 9 pm. It was
even its claws and we treated the wound that night. It is most unfortunate that
this had to happen,’’ he said.
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