Survivors of the recent Federal College of Education bombing
in Kano, Nigeria have recounted events that took place before a suicide bomber
exploded in front of them.
According to the Daily
Trust, the students were asked to leave the school premises or be killed. The
attack which lasted for about an hour led to the death of 17 people and scores
of people injured.
According to the paper, hundreds of students were raptly
listening to one of their lecturers, who was tutoring them a topic in Hausa
Studies, when suddenly a man appeared from nowhere clad in a black suit.
Commando-style, he shot many students. Though, it is a very lengthy piece, it
is nonetheless very touchy and interesting.
“The coming of one of the gunmen into our lecture hall was
heralded with gunshots as we are wondering who he was, he just started aiming
at us,” a-35-year old survivor, Ahmad Kawo Hadeja, told Weekly Trust at the
Murtala Mohammad Specialist Hospital, where he is receiving treatment.
Hadeja, who is a school teacher in Jigawa State, said he survived the attack
miraculously as many of his colleagues sitting close to him were killed. “I
went down flat like many other students in the class because we could not move
out as he was at the entrance. It was when we were rushed to the hospital that
I discovered that I had fractured on my leg,” he said.
With his close shave with death, Hadeja said he would no longer continue with his studies at the college, stressing that he would make do with the NCE he already has.
With his close shave with death, Hadeja said he would no longer continue with his studies at the college, stressing that he would make do with the NCE he already has.
“I had my NCE long time ago, it was with it that I secured a
teaching job but in my quest to further my studies I enrolled for a Bachelor of
Education programme at the college but with this I doubt if I will continue
it,” he said. Unlike Hadeja who survived the attack without a gun injury, Fatima
on the other hand was hit on the buttocks by a bullet.
“When the suicide bomber blew himself up, we were all worried
about Hauwa, my friend who was pregnant because she was among the first people
who were hit by the bullets from the gunman. So it was while we were struggling
to rescue her that I discovered that I was shot,” Fatima narrated.
“We all knew that Hauwa died on the spot but we were all
making efforts to rescue the baby in her womb but when we got to the hospital
after medical examinations, we were told that the baby, too, died,” she added
from her hospital bed.
Unlike Hadeja and Fatima, Abdulsamad Nasir, is a 12-year-old boy, who was at the institution to sell sachet water popularly known as pure water when the gunmen struck. While scampering for safety, Nasir, who is in primary 5, was shot in his left leg.
Unlike Hadeja and Fatima, Abdulsamad Nasir, is a 12-year-old boy, who was at the institution to sell sachet water popularly known as pure water when the gunmen struck. While scampering for safety, Nasir, who is in primary 5, was shot in his left leg.
“It was because of the long holiday that my mother
asked me to be selling pure water so that I can raise money for my school fees.
I saw the gunmen when they passed through the gate but before I could escape I
was shot,” he said.
Over 50 students are still at the Murtala Mohammed Specialist
Hospital receiving treatment. While some of them are saying they would not
return to school, others are saying they will, in order not to allow the insurgents
to achieve their aim. For his part, Abbas Idris, who survived the attack
without any injury, said he saw one of the gunmen when he was assisting his
female colleagues to escape.
Idris, a-200 level student of Social Studies department, said
one of the gunmen told them to stop going to school or else they will be sent
to their graves early.
“As we were assisting our female colleagues to scale the
fence, he was shooting. He was alone at the backside of our theatre hall so
when he exhausted his ammunition, he now told us that if we refuse to stop
going to school, they will not stop killing us,” he recalled.
“After uttering those words, we just heard a loud bang, only to see the body part of the person that was speaking to us litter the ground,” he added.
Narrating how he survived the attack, a lecturer in the institution, who is also a head of department, said the gunmen numbering about five, knocked on his office door several times but he hid inside the toilet. “When they started shooting from the entrance of the college, I was controlling students but when I discovered that they were very close to me I ran back into my office and hid inside the toilet. I switched off the light and lowered the curtains,” the lecturer recalled.
“After uttering those words, we just heard a loud bang, only to see the body part of the person that was speaking to us litter the ground,” he added.
Narrating how he survived the attack, a lecturer in the institution, who is also a head of department, said the gunmen numbering about five, knocked on his office door several times but he hid inside the toilet. “When they started shooting from the entrance of the college, I was controlling students but when I discovered that they were very close to me I ran back into my office and hid inside the toilet. I switched off the light and lowered the curtains,” the lecturer recalled.
“But they kept knocking; they would knock at the door, wait
for a while and they would knock again but I refused to stand up inside the
toilet where I lied down flat. I did not know when they left,” the lecturer
said, as he narrated his survival strategy to his colleagues on Thursday. He
said he spent close to two hours in the toilet before the security operatives
rescued him, saying: “I said my last prayers because I never knew I would
survive it.”
Close by, another lecturer, Dr. Thomas Kayode Ajamu, was
killed by the attackers. He was said to have been shot in the chest inside his
office. He hailed from Ogbomosho, Oyo State, and was shot by the gunmen before
they blew themselves up. His colleagues said Ajamu joined the services of the
institution 20 years ago.
Meanwhile, FCE Kano students have faulted the claim of the
security operatives that they engaged the gunmen during the attack. President
of the National Association of Kano State Students (NAKSS) in FCE, Usman
Mujitafa, said the security operatives were nowhere to be found when the gunmen
were unleashing terror on them. “It is not true that the security operatives
engaged the gunmen, they were nowhere to be found. They came after the
remaining gunmen have gone. The gunmen operated for about 45 minutes without
any confrontation and that was why the casualty was on the high side,” he said.
It is recalled that Kano State Police Commissioner, Adenrele Shinaba, had while addressing newsmen at the scene, said security operatives engaged the gunmen. The police boss said that one of the gunmen was shot by the security men before he exploded. The students, however, have been urged not to allow the attack deter them from seeking pursuing an education. Emir of Kano, Muhammad Sanusi II, made the call during his visit to the hospital where the victims are receiving treatment.
It is recalled that Kano State Police Commissioner, Adenrele Shinaba, had while addressing newsmen at the scene, said security operatives engaged the gunmen. The police boss said that one of the gunmen was shot by the security men before he exploded. The students, however, have been urged not to allow the attack deter them from seeking pursuing an education. Emir of Kano, Muhammad Sanusi II, made the call during his visit to the hospital where the victims are receiving treatment.
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