Delight Aguocha, friend and schoolmate of Queendalin Ekezie, the 15-year-old pupil of Army Day Secondary School, Obinze, Owerri, Imo State, who died recently after going through rigorous frog-jump punishment allegedly ordered for her and Delight, by two soldiers manning security in the school, has revealed ironically that the late school pupil, while alive, hated coming late to school.
“Queendalin did not like missing classes or going to school
late because she always wanted to participate in the morning assembly,” Aguocha said. “That we came late that day was because we couldn’t get
okada (commercial motorcyclist) on time and it was her who suggested that we
take a bus instead of getting late to school.”
An eyewitness’ account of what happened
The Chairman of the Ohaji/Egbema LGA (the local government
from which Queendalin hailed), Ebenezer Amadi, who, in a news report, described
how “deeply saddened” he was by news of the death because the victim was his
uncle’s daughter, confirmed Aguocha’s statement when he said: “From what we
heard, she was being punished for the first time when she slumped and died.”
“On that day, we had set out at 7am,” Aguocha revealed while
giving some insight into what happened. “We waited for a motorcycle to take us
to school till it was 8am. When we became frustrated, we decided to board a
commercial bus. But the driver did not leave the motor park until the bus was
filled with passengers.
“When we got to school at 9am, we met three sets of
latecomers on ground. Two soldiers were asking each set to do frog-jump to a
particular distance after which they picked their bags and entered their classes.
When it was our turn, we were about reaching the finishing line when they said
we were not doing it right and we should start again. After we repeated it, we
went to pick our schoolbags, but one of the soldiers said he was still not
satisfied.
“I completed the punishment the third time and I picked my
bag and left. I suddenly discovered that my friend was not with me. When I
returned to the place, I saw her crying. She started vomiting the food she ate
that morning. She was saying, ‘my back, my chest.’ The soldiers were just
staring at us.”
And, with that began the journey of no return that ended in
a hospital. The victim who became exhausted after repeating the exercise
several times, was said to have collapsed. She was reportedly rushed to an army
hospital where she died. As you read this, her remains are at the Federal
Medical Centre mortuary, Owerri, awaiting collection and burial.
The road from Umuoso to Obinze
Saturday Sun’s investigation shows that the schoolgirl who
comes from a poor family of seven children, two girls and five boys, attends
the school, not from Owerri town, as was originally supposed, but from Umuoso
village in Mgbuisi community in Ohaji/Egbema council Area of Imo State. It is a
distance of about six kilometres from Obinze, where her school, the Army Day
Secondary School, is located.
Commercial motorcyclists, known locally as okada charge N150
to N200 to convey students from the village to the school while bus drivers
collect N100 for the distance. Because students usually sit on each other’s
laps, in order to cut cost, each student may end up spending N100, to and fro,
instead of N200, whereas, if it were motorbike, each student is likely to spend
about N300. But sometimes the commercialist collects between N200 from two
pupils. But this kind of favour depends on the large-heartedness of the
commercial motorcyclist concerned.
Because of the bad state of the road leading to the
community, it would take a traveller approximately 25 minutes to get to the
place, using a commercial motorcyclist. Most people going to the community from
Obinze or from Obinze to the place, when in a hurry, patronise the commercial
motorcyclists.
That is how the kids from the community, including late
Queendalin, who school in Obinze or Owerri, transport themselves. In fact,
owing to the undulating nature and roughness of the road, our correspondents
had to employ the service of the okada operators on the day they visited the
Ekezies at Umuoso village.
On getting there, they found the place a bit untidy in a way
that bespeaks of poverty. This is not altogether strange for the peasant
farmers. But getting the head of the family and the father of Queendalin to
talk about his dead daughter was like squeezing water out of the rock.
Soldiers’ visit and father’s willingness to forgive
After the unfortunate incident, Saturday Sun learnt that the
soldiers came to meet the family for a meeting, but the meeting could not hold
because the girl’s father, Hygenius Ekezie, known to everybody in the community
as “Adiche”, fainted out of shock and was rushed to hospital.
But on the day that these correspondents visited, they found
him fully recovered and seated but still in mournful mood. He admitted that a
delegation of the army has already visited his family to pay their condolences
but refused, however, to be drawn into discussion on their deliberations and
what is going to be their degree of involvement in the burial of his daughter.
“There is no point talking about this issue again,” he
pleaded. As a matter of fact, he refused to allow his photograph to be captured
on camera. “We have decided to allow peace to reign. We have forgiven anybody
who might have been involved in the death of our daughter. God knows best. I
sat with my kinsmen and they told me to forget all that happened.”
Saturday Sun learnt from close sources that members of the
family are being cautious not to say anything to journalists that may end up
jeopardizing their chances of getting some compensation from concerned
authorities.
The school management, teachers and students too are said to
have been instructed not to talk to the Press. Those who agreed to talk about
the dead schoolgirl only did so after being assured that the discussion was not
going to centre on the controversy surrounding her untimely death. Even at
that, they spoke in monosyllables, in one or two sentences, while casting
glances about as if someone would come and arrest them any moment soon for
disobeying instruction.
Why I sent her to Army school, Obinze – Father
Queendalin has been described by her peers and indigenes of
Umuoso as not only a good girl but also academically brilliant. In fact,
Saturday Sun learnt that she was seriously reading and preparing to sit for the
Basic Education Certificate Examination (BECE) for Junior Secondary School 3
(JSS3) otherwise known as “Junior WAEC”, scheduled for April, before she met
her untimely death.
While each state of the federation and the Federal Capital
Territory (FCT) conducts BECE for its candidates, NECO conducts the exam for
Federal Unity colleges, Armed Forces secondary schools and other federal
establishments operating secondary schools.
“She happened to be the most brilliant of all my children
but it pains me that she can no longer be the “great woman” she had always
wanted to be,” her father said with a sigh, while looking vacuously into the
air as if he expects her to appear from it any moment soon (His wife,
Appolonia, distraught, vehemently refused to say anything). “She was very
obedient and very respectful and I am yet to come to terms that she just died
in the way she did. And she was liked by everyone in this village because she
was a very quiet person and did not make trouble or fight.”
He added: “I decided to send her to the Army Children Day
School at Obinze as a first step towards helping her realize her dream of
becoming a great woman. She said she wanted to become a lawyer or an engineer
in the future. And, I know she would have been one because she was brilliant.
But I regret that decision today because of what happened to her. I am sure
that if she had gone to our community school here may be she would still be
alive. I have left everything in the hands of God because he knows the best
because I don’t want trouble with anyone.”
The Queendalin we know, by friends and admirers
“Queendalin is very brilliant because she was good in all
the school subjects and you know that we are all preparing for the junior WAEC
and she has been reading so that she can make very good result” Aguocha, her
bosom friend, added by way of buttressing her father’s comments on the
deceased’s brilliance.
“My late friend was very brilliant and well-behaved,” she
re-iterated her point. “While alive, she did not like to make trouble with
anyone because she always minded her business. She was usually quiet but
friendly.”
But even though she spoke so glowingly about her friend, she
refused to be drawn into further comments on the raging controversy surrounding
her death. Neither was she willing to see her photograph in print.
Alice Opara, another of Queendalin’s classmate (they all
insist that she had always written and spelt her name without the final “e” as
it appeared in some news reports), disclosed that besides being academically
brilliant, Queendalin was a very quiet and friendly person both in school and
in the village.
“She was very intelligent, respectful and friendly and she
likes reading,” she said. “We will all miss her because she was a good person
and very generous with the things she had, too.”
Madam Agnes Orioha, a family friend who we met on the day of
our visit (she was there to console the family) said she was shocked by the
death of Queendalin. She added that most people in the village did not know
that she was the daughter of Hygenius as she was markedly and remarkably
different from her siblings.
“Her death was a big blow to her parents because she was
well-mannered and respectful,” she informed. “It is quite unfortunate. I don’t
know why bad things always happen to good people.’’
Akaego Uzoma, a classmate of the deceased said she would
miss her because of her good nature, noting that while alive, she was always
willing to assist her friends with their homework.
“Queendalin was one of the nice girls we have in this
village because she was not only brilliant, she was also good, always willing
to assist those of us who are not as brilliant as she was. She was respectful
and obedient. She once told me about her ambition to become a lawyer or an
engineer. She said she would like to work in an oil company and through that
way become a great woman in the community.’’
Speaking in the same vein, Madam Joyce Alozie, one of the
teachers who taught her at the community primary school in her village, during
her primary education, said that the late Queendalin had always shown that
streak of brilliance. “She has good memories and can remember things she learnt
no matter how long,” she revealed.
She pointed out that she was a very obedient and disciplined
girl. “It is indeed painful that such a brilliant girl just died like that.
Until her death, I did not hear any ugly report about her whether in this village
or elsewhere. I did not hear that she engaged in any delinquent behaviour like
what we have been witnessing in most young girls of her age in this village.
She was a good girl even though she came from a very poor family.’’
Official reactions
The 82 Division’s spokesman and Deputy Director, Army Public
Relations, Col. Sagir Musa, was quoted as saying that it would be premature to
comment on the incident. Instead, he directed all enquiries concerning the
matter to the Imo State Ministry of Education who he said would issue a
statement on it in due course.
But the State Commissioner for Education, Mrs. Gertrude
Oduka, has come out to say that government not in a hurry to issue the
much-expected statement without ‘thorough’ investigation into the incident.
“We have launched an investigation,” she said. “The matter
is so sensitive that we would not like to be in a hurry to issue public
statement on it. But we have dispatched our senior staff to find out exactly
what happened, that I can assure you.”
Sun
Frog-Jump Tragedy: Untold Story Of Pupil Who Died In Army
School
Delight Aguocha, friend and schoolmate of Queendalin Ekezie,
the 15-year-old pupil of Army Day Secondary School, Obinze, Owerri, Imo State,
who died recently after going through rigorous frog-jump punishment allegedly
ordered for her and Delight, by two soldiers manning security in the school,
has revealed ironically that the late school pupil, while alive, hated coming
late to school.
“Queendalin did not like missing classes or going to school
late because she always wanted to participate in the morning assembly,” Aguocha
told Saturday Sun. “That we came late that day was because we couldn’t get
okada (commercial motorcyclist) on time and it was her who suggested that we
take a bus instead of getting late to school.”
An eyewitness’ account of what happened
The Chairman of the Ohaji/Egbema LGA (the local government
from which Queendalin hailed), Ebenezer Amadi, who, in a news report, described
how “deeply saddened” he was by news of the death because the victim was his
uncle’s daughter, confirmed Aguocha’s statement when he said: “From what we
heard, she was being punished for the first time when she slumped and died.”
“On that day, we had set out at 7am,” Aguocha revealed while
giving some insight into what happened. “We waited for a motorcycle to take us
to school till it was 8am. When we became frustrated, we decided to board a
commercial bus. But the driver did not leave the motor park until the bus was
filled with passengers.
“When we got to school at 9am, we met three sets of
latecomers on ground. Two soldiers were asking each set to do frog-jump to a
particular distance after which they picked their bags and entered their classes.
When it was our turn, we were about reaching the finishing line when they said
we were not doing it right and we should start again. After we repeated it, we
went to pick our schoolbags, but one of the soldiers said he was still not
satisfied.
“I completed the punishment the third time and I picked my
bag and left. I suddenly discovered that my friend was not with me. When I
returned to the place, I saw her crying. She started vomiting the food she ate
that morning. She was saying, ‘my back, my chest.’ The soldiers were just
staring at us.”
And, with that began the journey of no return that ended in
a hospital. The victim who became exhausted after repeating the exercise
several times, was said to have collapsed. She was reportedly rushed to an army
hospital where she died. As you read this, her remains are at the Federal
Medical Centre mortuary, Owerri, awaiting collection and burial.
The road from Umuoso to Obinze
Saturday Sun’s investigation shows that the schoolgirl who
comes from a poor family of seven children, two girls and five boys, attends
the school, not from Owerri town, as was originally supposed, but from Umuoso
village in Mgbuisi community in Ohaji/Egbema council Area of Imo State. It is a
distance of about six kilometres from Obinze, where her school, the Army Day
Secondary School, is located.
Commercial motorcyclists, known locally as okada charge N150
to N200 to convey students from the village to the school while bus drivers
collect N100 for the distance. Because students usually sit on each other’s
laps, in order to cut cost, each student may end up spending N100, to and fro,
instead of N200, whereas, if it were motorbike, each student is likely to spend
about N300. But sometimes the commercialist collects between N200 from two
pupils. But this kind of favour depends on the large-heartedness of the
commercial motorcyclist concerned.
Because of the bad state of the road leading to the
community, it would take a traveller approximately 25 minutes to get to the
place, using a commercial motorcyclist. Most people going to the community from
Obinze or from Obinze to the place, when in a hurry, patronise the commercial
motorcyclists.
That is how the kids from the community, including late
Queendalin, who school in Obinze or Owerri, transport themselves. In fact,
owing to the undulating nature and roughness of the road, our correspondents
had to employ the service of the okada operators on the day they visited the
Ekezies at Umuoso village.
On getting there, they found the place a bit untidy in a way
that bespeaks of poverty. This is not altogether strange for the peasant
farmers. But getting the head of the family and the father of Queendalin to
talk about his dead daughter was like squeezing water out of the rock.
Soldiers’ visit and father’s willingness to forgive
After the unfortunate incident, Saturday Sun learnt that the
soldiers came to meet the family for a meeting, but the meeting could not hold
because the girl’s father, Hygenius Ekezie, known to everybody in the community
as “Adiche”, fainted out of shock and was rushed to hospital.
But on the day that these correspondents visited, they found
him fully recovered and seated but still in mournful mood. He admitted that a
delegation of the army has already visited his family to pay their condolences
but refused, however, to be drawn into discussion on their deliberations and
what is going to be their degree of involvement in the burial of his daughter.
“There is no point talking about this issue again,” he
pleaded. As a matter of fact, he refused to allow his photograph to be captured
on camera. “We have decided to allow peace to reign. We have forgiven anybody
who might have been involved in the death of our daughter. God knows best. I
sat with my kinsmen and they told me to forget all that happened.”
Saturday Sun learnt from close sources that members of the
family are being cautious not to say anything to journalists that may end up
jeopardizing their chances of getting some compensation from concerned
authorities.
The school management, teachers and students too are said to
have been instructed not to talk to the Press. Those who agreed to talk about
the dead schoolgirl only did so after being assured that the discussion was not
going to centre on the controversy surrounding her untimely death. Even at
that, they spoke in monosyllables, in one or two sentences, while casting
glances about as if someone would come and arrest them any moment soon for
disobeying instruction.
Why I sent her to Army school, Obinze – Father
Queendalin has been described by her peers and indigenes of
Umuoso as not only a good girl but also academically brilliant. In fact,
Saturday Sun learnt that she was seriously reading and preparing to sit for the
Basic Education Certificate Examination (BECE) for Junior Secondary School 3
(JSS3) otherwise known as “Junior WAEC”, scheduled for April, before she met
her untimely death.
While each state of the federation and the Federal Capital
Territory (FCT) conducts BECE for its candidates, NECO conducts the exam for
Federal Unity colleges, Armed Forces secondary schools and other federal
establishments operating secondary schools.
“She happened to be the most brilliant of all my children
but it pains me that she can no longer be the “great woman” she had always
wanted to be,” her father said with a sigh, while looking vacuously into the
air as if he expects her to appear from it any moment soon (His wife,
Appolonia, distraught, vehemently refused to say anything). “She was very
obedient and very respectful and I am yet to come to terms that she just died
in the way she did. And she was liked by everyone in this village because she
was a very quiet person and did not make trouble or fight.”
He added: “I decided to send her to the Army Children Day
School at Obinze as a first step towards helping her realize her dream of
becoming a great woman. She said she wanted to become a lawyer or an engineer
in the future. And, I know she would have been one because she was brilliant.
But I regret that decision today because of what happened to her. I am sure
that if she had gone to our community school here may be she would still be
alive. I have left everything in the hands of God because he knows the best
because I don’t want trouble with anyone.”
The Queendalin we know, by friends and admirers
“Queendalin is very brilliant because she was good in all
the school subjects and you know that we are all preparing for the junior WAEC
and she has been reading so that she can make very good result” Aguocha, her
bosom friend, added by way of buttressing her father’s comments on the
deceased’s brilliance.
“My late friend was very brilliant and well-behaved,” she
re-iterated her point. “While alive, she did not like to make trouble with
anyone because she always minded her business. She was usually quiet but
friendly.”
But even though she spoke so glowingly about her friend, she
refused to be drawn into further comments on the raging controversy surrounding
her death. Neither was she willing to see her photograph in print.
Alice Opara, another of Queendalin’s classmate (they all
insist that she had always written and spelt her name without the final “e” as
it appeared in some news reports), disclosed that besides being academically
brilliant, Queendalin was a very quiet and friendly person both in school and
in the village.
“She was very intelligent, respectful and friendly and she
likes reading,” she said. “We will all miss her because she was a good person
and very generous with the things she had, too.”
Madam Agnes Orioha, a family friend who we met on the day of
our visit (she was there to console the family) said she was shocked by the
death of Queendalin. She added that most people in the village did not know
that she was the daughter of Hygenius as she was markedly and remarkably
different from her siblings.
“Her death was a big blow to her parents because she was
well-mannered and respectful,” she informed. “It is quite unfortunate. I don’t
know why bad things always happen to good people.’’
Akaego Uzoma, a classmate of the deceased said she would
miss her because of her good nature, noting that while alive, she was always
willing to assist her friends with their homework.
“Queendalin was one of the nice girls we have in this
village because she was not only brilliant, she was also good, always willing
to assist those of us who are not as brilliant as she was. She was respectful
and obedient. She once told me about her ambition to become a lawyer or an
engineer. She said she would like to work in an oil company and through that
way become a great woman in the community.’’
Speaking in the same vein, Madam Joyce Alozie, one of the
teachers who taught her at the community primary school in her village, during
her primary education, said that the late Queendalin had always shown that
streak of brilliance. “She has good memories and can remember things she learnt
no matter how long,” she revealed.
She pointed out that she was a very obedient and disciplined
girl. “It is indeed painful that such a brilliant girl just died like that.
Until her death, I did not hear any ugly report about her whether in this village
or elsewhere. I did not hear that she engaged in any delinquent behaviour like
what we have been witnessing in most young girls of her age in this village.
She was a good girl even though she came from a very poor family.’’
Official reactions
The 82 Division’s spokesman and Deputy Director, Army Public
Relations, Col. Sagir Musa, was quoted as saying that it would be premature to
comment on the incident. Instead, he directed all enquiries concerning the
matter to the Imo State Ministry of Education who he said would issue a
statement on it in due course.
But the State Commissioner for Education, Mrs. Gertrude
Oduka, has come out to say that government not in a hurry to issue the
much-expected statement without ‘thorough’ investigation into the incident.
“We have launched an investigation,” she said. “The matter
is so sensitive that we would not like to be in a hurry to issue public
statement on it. But we have dispatched our senior staff to find out exactly
what happened, that I can assure you.”
Sun
Frog-Jump Tragedy: Untold Story Of Pupil Queendalin Ekezie Who Died In Army School
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Saturday, March 10, 2018
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