I have held myself from writing about the jail sentence over Ibinabo Fiberesima since it broke a couple of days back.
I
have read so many things about Ibinabo and the late Dr Giwa's family
including the appeal from Ibinabo's son, messages from the late Giwa's
daughter and even the letter which was alleged to have been written by
his sister all on different social media platforms.
I
have also followed keenly and read a lot of criticisms on the issue. A
lot of people are divided on the issue as some have argued that Ibinabo
deserves the jail term, while a larger group is pleading that she should
be pardoned. A few other people while applauding the court on its
delivered judgement, they also are of the opinion that after all the
years since the incident, the family should forgive Ibinabo as the five
year jail term would bring the later Dr Giwa back to life and so the
punishment on Ibinabo be reduced.
A
few minutes ago, I stumbled on this interview between Charles Novia and
one Mr De Gaulle, an eye witness at the scene of the accident as
reported by Charles Novia on his blog today, and so I thought you, my
dearest reader should gain more insight on this trending 'IBINABO AND
5YEAR SENTENCE' story.
Continue reading below the excerpt:
The reaction was one of stunned questions. And immediately,
I made the decision to interview the eye witness to find out what he
really saw and what it was that happened which the public may not have
heard these years. I decided to do this as a public service
responsibility first and also to put whatever the new facts are in the
public domain for posterity to prove or dispel. And if these new
revelations would help heal wounds and bring about a new dawn of
forgiveness and understanding, then so be it.
I got the number of the eye witness from his sister in the
chat room and called him. Now, let me state here that this is no
fiction. This fellow is real and is willing to expose himself to the
public anytime to state what he saw. I have decided not to put his
surname out ( even though he says he doesn’t mind) at this point in time
but that doesn’t detract from the real facts of this story.
‘Good afternoon, Mr De Gaulle. Your sister gave me your
number to call you to find out what happened that night. My name is
Charles Novia’ I said, when he answered, my pen and recorder ready.
‘Oh ok. Yes, she told me you would call. My name is De
Gaulle ( surname protected by me) You see, I’m ready to come out to
testify or say whatever happened that night of the accident because it
happened in my presence. I witnessed it and saw everything. We were many
who saw what happened that evening and I assumed that others might have
told the world what really went down but I’m surprised to read so many
untrue things about what happened at the scene of the accident that
evening’ He said.
‘Please go ahead, Sir. I’m taking notes and recording’ I said
‘ Ok. I saw Ibinabo a few years ago ( about six years ago)
in Port Harcourt at a restaurant called Gessy ( or Jessy?). She was with
some of your colleagues and my sister was there too. I told my sister
that ‘Hey! That’s that girl whom I helped at the scene of the accident
years ago’. My sister was surprised and called Ibinabo to meet me. And
when I told her what I’m about to tell you, she was surprised and quiet
for a long time.
That evening, what happened was that the Doctor’s car was
coming from the Victoria Island axis of the first Lekki Roundabout which
leads into the Lekki Phase One Estate, while another SUV which was
being driven by Ibinabo was coming out from the estate, if I remember
correctly. I cannot tell who was speeding or what but we heard a loud
crash and then I think the doctors car somersaulted while the other car
driven by Ibinabo was flung a few metres to the other side.
‘Was it midnight or late at night?’ I asked
‘No!’ Mr De Gaulle replied with much emphasis. ‘ It was
early evening. There was still the last trace of evening light. It might
have been just before seven o’clock or after seven. But it wasn’t late
So what happened was that the Doctor’s car was upside down
and somehow his hand was crushed and he was trapped in the car.
Immediately a few Area Boys and bystanders rushed to him to try and help
him out of the crushed car. I quickly parked my car and came out to
help as I rushed to the doctors car. A few other cars stopped as well.
I noticed that the other car was motionless and no one
really was paying much attention to that car. What got my attention was
the special number plates on the car which read ‘ DANIEL WILSON’ a
popular musician in the nineties in Nigeria.
When I got to the doctor’s car, the area boys and
bystanders were gathered round the car and were trying to help the man
out of the car in the upturned vehicle. At that point, the man was very
much alive. I swear he was alive and groaning but he was alive. His arm
was crushed or underpinned by the impact of the car and I still think
that it was the inexperience of the area boys and bystanders in trying
to pull the man out of the car, which killed him faster.
I am sorry to say that but that is my belief because of
what I saw. The people who gathered round that car may have meant well
but they were also callous in responding to the emergency and were
dragging at the man, trying to pull him from the crushed car.
The doctor kept crying out ( and I heard everything
clearly because I saw it and was even telling the crowd to be gentle)
and was shouting ‘ No! Take it easy! I’m a doctor. Don’t pull me like
that. Easy!’. I heard everything.
At this time, all attention was on the doctor. And I heard
someone in the crowd say that if anything happened to the man, they
would make sure the occupant in the other car suffers.
Immediately I heard that, I went to the other car because I
thought it was Daniel Wilson involved from the number plates. I was
surprised to see a fair-skinned lady behind the wheel, unconscious and
still. There was another lady in the car with her in the front seat. I
think it was a young lady of about sixteen years or a teenager. That
young lady was weeping and shaking.
After hearing what the guys at the other side had said
about the occupant of the car, my first instinct was to get them to
safety or to the hospital. I asked the young lady ‘ is there anyone you
can call to take you people to the hospital? You and this woman have to
leave this place now and get to a hospital’
I helped stop a taxi and helped carry the unconscious Ibinabo to the car and the taxi took them away.
Then I now returned to the other car of the late Doctor.
When I got there, another set of cars full of some doctors had arrived
the scene. The doctors said they were coming from some kind of meeting
or event near the beach or somewhere near if I remember and that the
bleeding occupant of the car was their colleague whom they had seen
earlier.
By the time I got back, the car had been turned to a
standing position but I believe it was too late for the injured person
in that car at that point.’
‘ So you say the doctor in the car was alive when the accident happened?’ I asked.
‘ He was. There was no immediate emergency care to help him
from competent medical personnel as what would obtain today and the
crowd tried to help him out and he was calling out in pain. It was sad
and painful. So when I saw Ibinabo a couple of years later in
Port-Harcourt and told her that I was the person who removed her from
the car and put her in a taxi, she was speechless and quaky. She too
could have died that evening. She didn’t run away from the scene of the
accident at all. I was the person who put her in a taxi to a hospital ‘
‘Why did it take you such a long time to come out to tell this story?’ I asked
‘I have been in and out of Nigeria these past ten years.
And I actually thought too that the case was done with all this while. I
was surprised to hear that she was just sent to jail. Look, it was an
unfortunate thing which happened. And I am ready at anytime, ANYTIME if I
am called upon to testify on what I saw. It happened before my eyes. If
my testimony would help put facts straight, I am ready’
I got in touch with Daniel Wison who corroborated that
Ibinabo drove his SUV that night in question. ‘She’s my sister. We are
from the same state and local government. It was the week of my mother’s
burial and Ibinabo had come from Port-Harcourt to help me with the
burial. She was wonderful and really supportive. That day, she needed
the car to get to somewhere on the island and I asked her to pick any
from the pool of cars in my compound. I was surprised when I got a call a
couple of hours later that there was an accident. I rushed to the
hospital, St Nicholas, and she was unconscious. But when she came out of
it, she was delirious and traumatised. She was shaky. Look Charles,
Ibinabo is a gentle soul. It was unfortunate that the accident happen
but it was not intentional in anyway. And we have been begging the
family of the late doctor. Who said we haven’t begged? I personally,
made numerous visits to the house to see the widow and elders of the
family. We attended the burial of the doctor. I was there. We begged and
begged. Not because we think begging could bring the man back but just
because it’s human nature to forgive. So, it’s not true that we remained
aloof’ Daniel concluded.
It’s been much of a nagging battle for me to decide if I
should put out this story or not. The initial hesitation was borne out
of the fact that many people would misconstrue the new testimony as
somewhat of a convenient revelation just to help a colleague, seeing
that we are in the same industry.
But at the end of my internal consideration, a part of me
decided to put it out anyway. First, to record a new chronicle of the
whole sad accident which millions, including me, never knew happened.
It’s better to be on the side of history which stands for true reportage
of events in this case. And since Mr De Gaulle is very willing to give
his account to any reporter or law enforcement agent for some measure of
revision, I am prepared too to give out his number to members of the
fourth estate of the realm and even the late doctor’s family to find out
more from the fellow himself.
Finally, I have always maintained that we all are bound by
the laws of our society. Ibinabo is serving a sentence passed by a law
court and we respect that. We sympathise with her and as an industry
would share the comfort between her and the family of the late Doctor.
But the final closure of this matter, beyond the law and
prison sentence she would serve, rests on the family of the late Dr Giwa
really. Now that there is a final vindication, as gleamed from the
letter by the late doctor’s sister, what happens after Ibinabo serves
her sentence? Would the family carry the hurt till the end of time?
A platform for reconciliation and forgiveness has to be set
in motion. This is not just about the law now but about healing.
Healing. Healing for all parties.
Just
as Charles concluded, I am also of the opinion that all parties
involved need healing and should really create a platform for
forgiveness and reconciliation so that pains would gradually be soothed.
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