A 10-month-old baby simply identified as
Goodness, who was rescued from the scene of the Monday bomb blast in
Nyanya near Abuja, has been reunited with her mother in hospital.
Goodness was separated from her mother, Gloria Adams, who was presumed dead in the explosion.
Before she was taken from the Asokoro
Hospital to the Wuse General Hospital where her mother is receiving
treatment in the Intensive Care Unit, Goodness spent Tuesday morning
sleeping.
Medical workers and her aunt, Maria
Dominic, looked after the little baby who had only a slight swelling
close to one of her eyes. Continue...
Her mother suffered severe injuries and is one of the two left in the Wuse General Hospital’s ICU after one other victim died.
Gloria, according to a hospital source said she was carrying Goodness on her back when the blast occurred.
The hospital source quoted her as saying,
“I cannot remember how I got here. I only saw myself on the ground,
turning and turning. Then someone came and removed my baby from my
back.”
The source said Gloria was very happy to see her baby alive.
“I’m feeling better. Many have died; but I
am alive. I give glory to God, for saving me and my little baby,” she
told the hospital workers.
While Gloria could afford to smile on
sighting her baby, Mrs. Hilda Shaka, an employee of the Bank of
Agriculture, fainted outside the hospital on learning of the death of
her ex-colleague, Jonathan John.
When efforts by her colleagues who were
also in the hospital to make her regain consciousness failed, she was
rushed to another hospital where she was admitted.
A member of staff of BOA said, “Two of
our colleagues were involved in yesterday (Monday) explosion and
their cases were severe. Some of us are here hoping that they will
recover, but after a series of medical attention on John, he still
couldn’t make it.
“When Mrs. Shaka heard of John’s death,
she fainted. We thought it was a joke, but after spending so much time
trying to revive her without success, we decided to rush her to another
hospital. But we thank God that she is recovering.”
A relation of another victim, Mr. Hamza
Umar, told one of our correspondents at the same Wuse hospital that his
brother, Isa Nuhu, was among those burnt to death at the scene of the
blast.
Umar said that it was too painful that
after one of his younger brothers watched Nuhu burn to death, they
had yet to find out the mortuary where his body was deposited.
He added, “We had been to the National
Hospital before but we are going back there now. We don’t know what to
do. My brother sells recharge cards and repairs handsets.
“One of our brothers saw him on the
ground with his legs already burnt. There was also fire on his body but
security agents did not allow the guy to go and stop the fire and so he
died.”
A community leader in Karu Local
Government Area of Nasarawa State, Chief Waziri Yemide, said two of his
children, Audu and Babangida, were seriously injured in the explosion.
He said, “I feel unhappy over the blast
but I thank God because none of them is dead. The only one that is in
the hospital has wounds on his legs.”
A survivor, Oguike Charles, told one of
our correspondents at the Asokoro General Hospital, that he had been
lucky to escape death in Abuja.
“This is the second time I have found
myself lucky. I narrowly escaped the Nigerian Immigration Service
recruitment tragedy in Abuja last month,” Charles added.
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