Two Holes discovered on the body of Proffessor Festus Iyayi's
Body has given life to the suspicions by his fellow colleagues that he
may have been shot to death and not killed in an accident as widely
reported.
Iyayi was travelling to Kano in the company of
three other ASUU members for a meeting on the ongoing strike by members
of the union when a police escort van in the convoy of the Governor
Idris Wada of Kogi State rammed into the bus the university teachers
were travelling. Iyayi died instantly, while three his colleagues were
seriously injured.
One Week after the accident ASUU dismissed the
view that Iyayi's death was accidental and forcefully contested the
official claim that his heart was pierced by a strange object at the
accident scene.
The association pointedly blamed the death on the
government and “its agents”. In a statement issued by the University of
Benin chapter of the union, ASUU said Iyayi did not die in an accident,
but was “wilfully” murdered.
The union said it will demand
concrete answers from the government for the alleged murder. It demanded
that an autopsy be performed on Iyayi’s corpse and warned government
officials to stay away from the burial.
Civil society groups in Edo State also demanded an inquiry into Iyayi’s death.
Photographs below of Iyayi’s corpse obtained show holes that look like entry and exit bullet holes.
The
Joint Action Front, JAF, a coalition of labour organisations,has also
accused the government of masterminding Iyayi’s murder. A statement
signed by its president, Comrade Abiodun Aremu, said the circumstances
of Iyayi’s death are questionable.
They argued that there was
nothing at the accident scene that could have drilled holes in Iyayi’s
body. When told the coroner’s inquest did not support his claims,
Akhaine retorted: “The coroner’s report is not the result of an autopsy.
Until an autopsy is done, you cannot say anything to the contrary.”
But
how closely do the holes on Iyayi’s body resemble those made by
bullets, especially given that the one on the chest looks big? A retired
army colonel told Reporters that the holes have a high degree of
consistency with those made by bullets.
“There is a 70 per cent
probability that the man was murdered and 30 per cent that it was an
accident,” he said. If it was an accident, he argued, the impact would
have caused a squeeze, not neatly drilled holes. He explained that a
close-range shot from a pistol would cause the bullet to enter an
object, as it allegedly did Iyayi, and exit through the back.
“The
big hole in the chest shows that it was a pistol. This is because the
wound a pistol creates is bigger at the entrance and smaller at the
exit. But if it was a Kalashnikov (AK47), it would be smaller at the
entrance and bigger at the exit,” he further explained. The retired
officer added that AK47 bullets gather momentum as they hit target,
unlike pistol bullets, which create bigger impact at the point of entry.
“There
is the possibility of shooting in the confusion of the accident or that
the accident could have been contrived to cover up shots,” the retired
colonel said. But did any of the survivors hear a shot before or after
the crash? Not exactly, but they are not ruling out the possibility that
a gun may have gone off on account of the impact created by the
collision. This is because in all likelihood, the vehicle responsible
for the accident had heavily armed passengers.
“I heard the two
vehicles collide. But given that it was a police vehicle, it is possible
that, as we usually notice, cops in the escort vehicles of governors
are always armed. So, anything could have happened on impact,” reasoned
Anthony Monye-Emima, Chairman, University of Benin ASUU branch. If that
was what happened, could Iyayi’s death be described as anything but
accidental? Obviously not. Lawyer and former university teacher,
Professor Itse Sagay, urged caution.
Sagay, who was sacked
alongside Iyayi from the University of Benin by the military regime of
General Ibrahim Babangida in 1987, said: “Nobody can pinpoint exactly
what was responsible for the injury (the hole in the chest), which I
believe killed him.
There was no piece of iron or sharp-edged
object found that could have done it. I believe the only solution to the
problem is to have a very thorough autopsy to determine the cause of
death and from there, one can then begin to build on what possibly could
be responsible for his death.” Sagay added that since there is no doubt
that Iyayi’s death was caused by somebody in Governor Wada’s convoy, a
case of murder or at the minimum, manslaughter, could be
established.Iyayi’s death.
Prof. Wole Soyinka insisted that Iyayi must not be buried without a coroner’s inquest.
He
said: The world is watching. With the mortuary photos of the late
Festus Iyayi just published, the world is waiting and watching if the
corpse shown in that image will be interred without a coroner’s inquest.
To
allow this to happen is to make all of us accessories to a possible
crime. It means we are now attuned to the culture of impunity and
forfeited all claims to elementary ctiizen security. Tributes ring
hollow if doubts are silenced.
“Beyond all doubt” is a protective
armour for each one of us, no matter where and how. So let the nation be
placed in knowledge Beyond All Doubt over the circumstances of Festus
Iyayi’s death.
That is the minimum any self-respecting society
must demand, not merely as a collective shield, but in the service of
Truth, and for all posterity. We remain haunted by the far too frequent,
unexplained decimation in the ranks of the committed. READ MORE: http://news.naij.com/53512.html
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