The
day had started well like other previous days at Shehu Sanda Kyarimi
Government Day Senior Secondary School, located at Customs area of
Maiduguri metropolis. Students in the SS 3 class filed into their
classroom.
A
few minutes later, their teacher emerged and introduced some teasing
remarks with a mixture of jokes as his attention-catching method. The
interesting jokes threw the class into a frenzy. But sadly, two unusual
guests, who came to carry out some bizarre assignment, brought the
euphoria into an abrupt end. “The two strangers (gunmen) just appeared
at the door and it was like our malami (teacher) suspected something bad
was coming. They called him outside and he was trying to go and then
they fired at him.
Everybody
jumped up and there was confusion. They started shooting again. That’s
all I know,” Hadiza, one of the victims of the Monday attack at the
Shehu Sanda Kyarimi Government Day Secondary School told Gov Kashim
Shetima, who visited them at the University of Maiduguri Teaching
Hospital (UMTH).
She
said they were hit by stray bullets from the sporadic shooting by the
gunmen as they attempted to flee the classroom after their teacher was
killed, adding that the students would miss their economics teacher, who
was gunned down before their very eyes.
Medical
personnel in the hospital said Hadiza had a fracture on her leg from
gunshots. While Hadiza could still recall the tragic incident as she
lies on her hospital bed, the three others seem to be too weak to talk.
Gov Kashim Shettima, who expressed his sympathy to the families of the
affected student during his visit to the hospital on Tuesday, promised
the readiness of the state government to handle further treatment of the
female students if the need arises.
“I
assure you we will foot the bill and other expenses even outside the
country if there is need for that, but the hospital has assured us that
they can handle the situation for now,” he said. While condemning the
attack, he said the government would empower the parents of the students
to ensure they get out of their coma.
He
gave out N200, 000 to each of the students and equally extended similar
gesture to other patients in the hospitals as well as four soldiers
affected by the Tuesday bomb explosion. Earlier in the day, the governor
had visited the four schools attacked by suspected Boko Haram men where
six people, including three teachers, were killed in the early morning
shooting. He announced a donation of N2 million to the families of the
deceased teachers.
“The
monetary donations were not to compensate the already killed teachers
but to enable the family members of the deceased and survivors cushion
their financial need,” he explained. Some gunmen suspected to be Boko
Haram members on Monday morning invaded four schools in the Maiduguri
metropolis.
They
included Mafoni Government Day Secondary School, Ali Askiri Primary and
Junior Secondary School, Shehu Sanda Kyarimi Senior Secondary (Day)
School and Yelwa Central Primary School. At Mafoni Government Day, a
female administrative staff of the school, one Hadiza Abdulmalik and her
two guests were shot dead while the Arabic teacher/assistant headmaster
at Ali Askiri Primary school was also gunned down.
Yelwa
Central also lost one of its teachers in the school massacre while a
teacher at Shehu Sanda Kyarimi was killed. The teacher was said to have
gone into hiding some months ago after receiving threats from suspected
Boko Haram members. “He ran to his village at Gozamala because of the
fear that he might be killed.
He
was there for about two months and returned barely a month ago when the
gunmen came,” the head teacher of the school told the governor.
No comments:
Post a Comment