Search This Blog
Saturday, October 12, 2013
My wife’s last words to me were ‘takecare and goodbye’ –Crash victim’shusband
Mrs. Oluwatoyin Alabi, 45, had barely settled in
her new position as the Ondo State Liaison
Officer in Lagos when she died on an official
assignment.
Oluwatoyin was promoted on September 13,
2013 from her former position as a chief
executive officer at the liaison office. However, a
state assignment that required Oluwatoyin to
accompany the corpse of former Ondo State
governor, Olusegun Agagu, to the state from
Lagos, for a state burial, began the journey that
led to her death.
Her husband, Mr. Taiwo Alabi, 50, said her wife’s
last journey, which was to see her deliver
Agagu’s corpse to Akure in Ondo State, was
shrouded in mystery till the last minute.
Alabi said, “The (Ondo) State governor told my
wife on October 1, 2013 that she would be the
one to accompany the corpse from Lagos to
Ondo. When she told me that evening, I asked
‘why you, since you’re not a commissioner, but
she said that was what she was told.
“I asked what type of flight they would be taking,
but she said nobody had told her yet. On
October 2, 2013, she got a call from the
Commissioner for Special Duties that they should
meet at the morgue to dress Agagu’s body and
make arrangements for police escort.
“On October 3, 2013, she left home around 5am
and called me some minutes before 8am that
they were at the airport. I asked what airline they
would be flying but she said that up till that
moment, she still had not been told which airline
it would be. But 25 minutes later, she called to
tell me that it was Associated Airline and that
they were waiting because the weather condition
in Ondo was said to be unfavourable.
“The name of the airline didn’t ring a bell
because I had never heard of the airline before,
so I told her to be careful and find out more.
Then later, she called to inform me that the
weather was fine now and that they were
leaving. She said ‘take care and good bye’, but I
didn’t know that those would be her last words
to me.”
According to Alabi, there was news that
Oluwatoyin and other passengers were supposed
to fly another plane belonging to another airline
before a last-minute change.
He said, “We heard that they had booked for
another airline but changed to Associated Airline
in the last minute.”
Alabi said he too had left home that morning for
Ibadan in Oyo State, and heard about the crash
on his way.
He said, “Thank God I had one of my brothers
with me because he was the one who took the
steering wheel from me. The news shocked me. I
thought ‘where do I start from?’”
Alabi and Oluwatoyin had been together for 24
years, ten years of courtship and 14 years of
marriage. Their only daughter, who is 11 years
old, is in Junior Secondary School Two, Federal
Government College, Sagamu, Ogun State.
Alabi said telling her daughter about
Oluwatoyin’s death was one of the toughest
things he had had to do in his life.
He said, “When we managed to tell my daughter,
with the support of some other people about her
mother, she fainted and we had to revive her.
She was very close to her mother. But
surprisingly, she has been strong since then.
She’s the one that is even encouraging me now.
“Her concern now, which she has been asking
me, is ‘how will I cope at home alone’ by the
time she returns to her boarding house. My
mother and some other relatives are with us now
but they will soon leave.”
However, Alabi said he would not consider
remarrying until her daughter was old enough or
in the university because he could not risk giving
his daughter a “step mother who would maltreat
her.”
“I don’t want any woman to come and maltreat
my daughter because one cannot trust anybody
on anything,” he added.
Alabi said he had barely eaten since his wife’s
death, considering the void she left behind.
He said, “I can’t even say these are my
weaknesses because she had been covering for
me. She was so generous that she was only
spending about ten per cent of her salary on
herself.
“She would buy this and that for widows, pay
school fees of people. I don’t think I can meet up
with the legacy she left behind because she was
paying school fees of about 20 people.”
Alabi said he left his job in 2006 to go into
printing business, but that the country’s
economy had been rather harsh on its survival.
He said, “So my wife had been the one
supporting the family a lot. She had even
planned to buy a printing machine for the
business by the time they paid all her
allowances. Government should have pity on the
family.”
Meanwhile, Alabi said he was yet to receive a call
from the Associated Airline or any of the aviation-
related government agencies.
He said, “There has been no single call from the
airline since the crash. Even the Nigerian
Airspace Management Authority or any of the
agencies has also not bothered to call the family.
I think it’s very bad.”
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment