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A shocking death and the will of God

A shocking death and the will of God

By Simon Kolawole

Oluchi anekwe

How do you respond to the electrocution of a promising university undergraduate, a first-class material at that? You can say “it is God’s will” — as it is our custom in Nigeria — or you can say that once again, another light has been dimmed in clearly avoidable circumstances. Oluchi Anekwe, a 300-level accounting student of the University of Lagos, was killed on Tuesday when a naked wire fell on her from an electric pole. Since there was no natural disaster such as a storm, you get the sense that the deadly cable had been hanging dangerously for a while. It was somebody’s responsibility, I guess, to maintain those cables. The “somebody” failed in his duty and there are no consequences. Life goes on. We await the next electrocution, the next “God’s will”.

So, how many people have died needlessly in Nigeria? If someone illegally goes on an electric pole to tamper with the installation and gets electrocuted, we can say there was a trespass and a self-affliction. It is still not acceptable for any Nigerian to die carelessly — whether or not it is self-afflicted — but official negligence makes it all the more painful and we should, ordinarily, be full of regrets. Only God knows how many people have died from electrocution in Nigeria for reasons that are considered to be God’s will. The rain falls and a weak electric pole comes down on innocent road users or passers-by and send them to their early graves. It is “God’s will”. It is the will of God that people should be careless about their jobs and go away scot-free, right?

Could it be God’s will that people should do the right and sensible thing? To start with, cables are hardly laid over the ground these days. They are laid below the surface — like sewage and water pipes. It not only solves an aesthetic problem, it addresses a health and safety issue. I am shocked anytime I see newly developed areas in Nigeria still laying surface cables on rickety poles. Let us admit that the electric cables have been over the ground for decades and we can do nothing about that for now — but could it be God’s will that electricity officials who get paid to oversee the electric infrastructure should be diligent in enforcing and maintaining safety so that naked cables stop killing innocent Nigerians? How many people have to die before enough is enough?

Did you hear about the container that fell off a trailer and killed a family of three in Lagos recently? It was the will of God, I was told, because if God had not willed it, there was no way the accident could have happened. You know the line: were it not for God’s will, the container would have missed them by a few inches or they wouldn’t have been on the road at that time. It was their destiny. Do you know how many containers regularly fall off trailers and crush people to death in Nigeria? Do you know that the last one is not going to be the last one? Do you know that there are rare cases of such accidents in some other countries — countries where the name of God is used as a curse word or as a joke? Why should God decide to be killing his children in Nigeria with containers all the time?

I am wondering if it is God’s will that safety standards should be enforced on our roads by those who rule over us. I am wondering if it is God’s will that officials who certified a vehicle roadworthy should be called to account for their negligence after accidents. I am wondering if broken down vehicles should be left in the middle of the road at night. I am wondering if it is God’s will that our streetlights should work so that people will stop dying in avoidable accidents at night. I am wondering if it God’s will that our roads should be littered with potholes that serve as death traps, sending sorrows to homes on a daily basis. I am wondering if it God’s will that hospitals are ill-equipped and people die daily from treatable ailments.

Some years ago, a friend’s younger brother fell ill at midnight. He managed to get a neighbour’s car to take the brother to the hospital. He got to the gate of the estate and found it firmly locked. The security guard said they were under instruction not to open the gate until 6am. All pleadings fell on deaf ears. By the time somebody came to his senses and ordered the gate opened, it was too late. My friend’s sibling had died right in the vehicle — according to “God’s will”. If God did not want the brother to die, the conventional wisdom declares, the brother would not have fallen ill at night when the gates were locked. In fact, the brother would not have fallen ill at all. My friend was traumatised for years and eventually relocated from Nigeria, unable to overcome the devastation.

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In godless countries, it is God’s will that there should be emergency services. It is God’s will that you dial a number at anytime of the day and the ambulance and paramedics show up. It is God’s will that life-threatening cases are treated without any pre-condition of making cash deposits. But in our godly country, it is God’s will, we are tutored, for bullet-wound victims to bleed to death. It is God’s will that accident victims are abandoned to die because there is nobody to guarantee payment of hospital bills. It is God’s will that our hospitals should be in a deplorable state, and the people who embezzled the funds and mismanaged the commonwealth are able to fly abroad for the best medical treatment, while the people are dying from typhoid and malaria.

Kolawole is the publisher of TheCable. You may read the original and complete version of this piece here.

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