Shade Silifat Abdulkadir, the mother of the three children who suffocated to death in a parked car in Ilorin, Kwara State capital, last Sunday, has broken her silence on the tragic incident.
In an interview with
journalists on the last moments of the deceased children, 37-year-old Shade
appealed to Nigerians to come to her aid.
The first child, Maryam was 10
years old, Nudrah, the second child was 8 years and the third, Mohammed, was 2.
All three children died after
suffocating in the car parked in their residence.
Heraldviews gathered that the
vehicle was borrowed by their father from his elder brother.
Speaking at her family house, Ile Magaji, Taiwo Isale, in Ilorin, Shade pleaded with all mothers to come to her aid.
Narrating the incident, Shade
said, “It happened on Sunday around some minutes to 2:00 pm, shortly after I
finished cooking rice for them. It was my second daughter, Nudrah, who told me
that she would not eat rice in school the next day (Monday) and that she would
prefer spaghetti.
“I have money in the shop and
N700 in my Opay account but was left with cash of N200 only. I live at No 8
Boluke area in the Zango-Kulende area of Ilorin and operate a shop at Oke-Andi,
Zango, where I sell provisions and other items.
“It would only cost me N200 to
go and come back home. So I told my children that if at all, what I have is not
up to buying what you want, I have people I can collect money from till I get
to shop on Monday and I left. This is not the first time I would leave them and
go to buy something.
“Sometimes, I would leave them
and go and fetch water and they would be playing inside. At times, if I get a
job from churches, mosques or from any celebrant to help make doughnuts or
snacks, because I am also a caterer, I go and deliver it to the customers and
leave the children at home.
“My husband married another
wife which I didn’t get to know on time. I faced a lot of issues in my marriage
which is now 11 years and there has never been peace.
“My husband has been moving
with the lady called Kafayat from Oke-Ode for quite some time and I was told to
be patient and my family and his are aware of the development.
“Sometimes he comes home around
11:00 pm and leaves home very early in the morning. All my children were not
gotten in peace, it was from one trouble to another. Sometimes, if we had a
quarrel, he would drive me outside in the middle of the night. His name is
Jimoh Abdulkadir from Babanloma in Kwara South.
“It happened that he impregnated the girl but the child died after birth. On the day of marriage, he introduced the wife to me. But penultimate Saturday, the lady gave birth again. I am not his first wife. A lady had given birth to a child for him before but I met him as a single father and he was not like this before I married him.
“So after his second wife had
her second child, my husband informed me and I went to greet him.
“When I woke up on Sunday, I
saw the voice note of my husband that Kafayat has relocated from her previous
apartment in case I still want to come and greet her. They have been married
not even up to a year and they had a societal wedding unlike mine which was
only Nikkah.
“On Thursday and Saturday, I
went to greet her in the new location described by my husband. And it was after
I went to greet Kafayat at home that he suddenly changed his attitude towards
me. If I sleep in the bedroom, he would sleep in the parlour and if I sleep in
the parlour, he would go to the bedroom. But all my family and friends advised
me to be patient for the sake of the children whenever I complained.
“They didn’t tell me anything
about the naming ceremony except people that called me to ask why I was not
present,” Shade declared.
She said it was on Saturday,
after they finished the naming, that her husband brought the car owned by his
elder brother home which they used to do all the running around and packing of
items during the event.
“Although before we got
married, his brother had been using the car and this is not his first time he
would borrow it.
“If we were talking during the
period or I had a premonition of what would happen, I would have told him to
return the car to the owner who will need it to go to work on Monday. He didn’t
return the car and didn’t park it at the venue of the event. Why is it that he
had to park it here where I am staying?
“Now the car was there from
that Saturday till Sunday when the incident happened.
“After the children requested noodles to take to school the next day, I went to the shop to get the indomie noodles for them. Before I went, my last born, Mohammed, was crying but I said the sun was much and I would not want to take him outside because of the heat. I called Maryam who is the eldest to take care of her siblings.
“But when I came back, I
noticed that the children had scattered the entire room and met the door open.
I also saw their shoes and envisaged they would not be out of the premises
because they would put on their shoes if they were going outside the gate. I
never thought of the vehicle even for a second.
“From my house to the shop is
just a N100 bike. I called out for them when I came and couldn’t find them.
Initially I thought they were playing hide and seek with me. I checked
everywhere but to no avail. My landlady had gone to work because she was on
morning duty.
“The flat next to us was
occupied by aged couples and my children don’t usually go inside their house
except on a few occasions.
“When I couldn’t find them, I
checked inside the domestic well but nothing was there, I took Okada to the
junction crying that I couldn’t find my children.
“When I came back, I went to
knock at the door of the next flat to tell them that I couldn’t find my
children, the woman’s husband was already asleep.
“She told me she heard their
cries about 10 minutes ago, when she was even calling Maryam, asking why she
was beating her siblings. Later something just told me to check inside the
vehicle and I saw them inside.
“I managed to open one of the
doors and met them just lying down but the remaining three doors did not open.
I was asking them why they went inside the car, which they don’t usually do.
But their posture and the way I saw them made me terrified, I called them but
no answer and I started shouting for help.
“It was the woman’s husband
that came to force the other doors open and dragged Mohammed out, his hand got
injured in the process.
“So my shout later attracted
some boys and other people outside, some of whom jumped our security fence and
we started pouring water on them to revive them but to no avail. It was those
people that rushed them to Olutayo hospital, I didn’t see them after that.
“Me and my husband were still not in talking terms up till that Sunday morning, though he slept in the house that day but people would hardly know that we have issues or are quarrelling because he still used to take us to the shop and drop us at home and the children were even appreciating him. Even if he wants to communicate with me, it’s through the children.
“Earlier before that day, he
sent Maryam to go and ask a nearby vulcanizer, Jamiu, how much it will cost to
repair one of the tyres of the vehicle,” she stated.
The distraught mother added:
“Since the incident I have not set my eyes on their dad but I was told he came
here at our family house.
“He has also called me twice
since the incident saying thrash for all I care, asking when am I coming home
or what do I feel.
“The police came and I also
narrated this to them. They said the Inspector General of Police was interested
and was the one who called the Commissioner of Police to inquire what was going
on in Kwara State before they later sent officers here.
“But I have strengthened my
faith in Almighty Allah coupled with the people that God surrounded me with.
That is just what is keeping me going.”
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