"It was a very serious attack and an unexpected one. Before the attack on our school, Boko Haram terrorists had attacked Kano State Polytechnic inside the city centre, with the new strategy of using female and male teenagers, who they arm with bombs. In broad-day light on Wednesday, September 17, our school, the Federal College of Technology, Kano, was attacked.
That day, I didn’t have lectures, but, in my usual way, I had to go to school, because I am very friendly with my students.
I am always in
my office to solve their problems because I love my students. I must say
that I had premonition which, if I had heeded, I wouldn’t have been
involved in the attack. One, I didn’t have lectures; two, when I got to
the school gate, I discovered my office keys were not in my bag; three,
my wallet containing my identity card, driver’s licence and other
important documents was not with me. But when I got to the office, my
colleague had already opened the door with his own key. If the door had
been locked, I would have gone back home.
I stayed in the
office, Room 78, upstairs at the new site of School of Arts and Social
Sciences, FCE, Kano. Around 1.15pm that day, I heard the sound of
multiple bomb explosions at close range. Before you knew it, there was
pandemonium. Students and staff were running helter skelter for their
lives. On noticing this, I came out of my chair to check what was
happening and what I saw was the Boko Haram people wielding AK-47 guns
shooting sporadically and directly at everyone at sight. Downstairs,
they had killed one of our lecturers, Dr. Thomas Kayode Ajamu from
Ogbomoso, Oyo State. Dr. Ajamu, a former Head, Department of Christian
Religious Studies, CRS, was buried that same week.
So when I came
out of the door, there was no way to pass. Dead bodies littered
everywhere because this attack happened at the prime-time for lectures.
Before the
attack, I have reason to believe terrorists came on surveillance.
Several male teenagers came visiting our offices in pretence that they
were begging for money. The one that came to my office said, teacher
good afternoon, please I am going to the hospital, I am not feeling too
well, but I don’t have money for transportation. Even though I don’t
understand Hausa very well. I replied him in Hausa, that I forgot my
money at home, that there was no money on me, and he thanked me and
left.
That was the
conversation during the surveillance time and they did it in all the
blocks in the five departments of the school- Department of History
where I belong, Department of Geography, Social Studies, Christian
Religious Studies, Islamic Religious Studies, and the Deanery. They
surveyed everywhere before the attack.
My office is
located on the first floor of a one storey building, so, I couldn’t jump
down. I saw students jumping down, some got injured, while others
didn’t. What I did was that I hugged a pillar from the first floor,
trying to come down through it. So, when students noticed I have created
an escape route, many joined me and it was in that process that there
was a stampede. I fell down and couldn’t move because the long bone
joining my right knee got broken and shifted out of its socket.
I was trapped. I
couldn’t run because a Boko Haram man was just a stone throw. So, I
told myself, ‘to God be the glory, God receive my soul in heaven’. There
was no escape, the man was directly shooting sporadically at any person
in sight. He was shooting directly at both the young and old. They
didn’t spare young boys and girls who came to the school to sell
groundnut and pure water. All of them where shot dead.
At the end,
there was a massive attack, many people were killed, several others were
wounded. The big testimony of it all, was that the Boko Haram man was
standing on me, while shooting at others. When I saw him I played dead. I
remembered when I was in Alvan Ikokwu College of Education, Owerri, in
1984, there was this lecture we had then on self-defence mechanism. I
remembered the lecturer told us how to escape if we were in situations
like this. So, that knowledge came into me. Another thing that came into
my mind at that critical moment was that I remembered that I and my
wife had been praying and fasting against gun shots, bomb blast.
At the Boko
Haram man stood on me as if I was a dead victim, I didn’t know how God
seized the pains I was going through as a result of the broken knee bone
and also my breathe was also seized.
Few minutes
later, the man left me and was walking away towards the school gate. At
that same time, there was one of the female lecturers in my department
who was finding her way out with four others. The man spotted them and
asked them to say their last prayers. While they put their hands up to
say the prayers, the bomb the man had on his body blew him up.
Shortly
thereafter, a security guard came to me and asked me to stand up, stand
up, but I told him I couldn’t, that my leg was broken. He tried to pull
me but it was not easy because I was bigger than him. He managed to pull
me to hide behind a door inside a class. There too, I also played dead
because the sound of gun shots was still raging.
Some minutes
later, I peeped from the door and saw some policemen inside the school. I
was in dilemma as to whether to call them to come and help me or not,
because, sometimes, these Boko Haram people dress in police and military
uniforms. Everybody had vacated the school premises, nobody knew I was
behind the door writhing in pains. I said if the policemen were not
authentic security agents that means I am gone, because there was still
sound of gun shots.
God receive my soul
I said within
myself, if they were genuine policemen, I have a testimony to tell, but
if they were fake, God receive my soul. So, I summoned the courage and
called them, ‘Officer, officer, please come and rescue me’, and they
said ‘who are you?’ I introduced myself as Chief Ojimba of History
Department of the college. I told them I fell from upstairs and my leg
was broken.
It was then that
they mobilised other soldiers. They asked for my ID card. I told them I
left it at home. They didn’t believe me and threatened to kill me. I
said I couldn’t stand up, my leg was broken.
I said they
could waste me but I was a lecturer in the school and they could confirm
by going to my office at room 78. I said they could see my two phones
and a new laptop in the office. Yet they didn’t believe me, so, they
ordered me to pull-off my shirt and singlet which I did. They further
asked me to pull-off my trousers and I cried to them that my legs were
already swollen and my bones broken and I could not. In harsh tone, they
warned that if I fail to obey their instructions they will shoot me.
After doing that, they also asked me pull-off my short, which I did and
was stark naked.
Well, one
shouldn’t blame them, because they were actually doing their job. They
wanted to confirm if I was not one of the terrorists, and was not
concealing any bomb in me. When they noticed I was stark naked and
nothing was on me, they instructed me to put on my clothes. Then, they
rescued me out of the place. An Assistant Superintendent of Police, ASP,
that came with the team, an elderly man like myself, carried me on his
back, with three other soldiers carrying my swollen right leg to the
waiting school ambulance. I cried like a baby, as I was taken to the
Murtala Muhammed Specialist Hospital, Kano. I have never cried like that
before all my life. It was then that they brought out dead, Dr. Ajamu
of the Department of CRS. He was shot inside his office, because the
Boko Haram people went to offices, classrooms and toilets shooting
anybody at sight.
I stayed at the
specialist hospital with my broken leg inside Plaster of Paris, POP, for
about a week. But I must confess that I was impressed by the way our
school’s governing council, the school management, students, staff
unions, friends and relations rallied round me while I was hospitalised.
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