Mutilated-body-of-late-Chuma // Photo credit: The Sun
The strange story you’re about to read happened in the University of Port Harcourt Teaching Hospital (UPTH) mortuary, Rivers State Capital.
The eyes of an 18-month-old twin named Chuma who died of anaemia in the hospital’s children’s ward on August 3, 2018, still missing, reports says.
It was gathered that two weeks later, on September 17, when the father of the dead child, had gone back to pay the mortuary bill, he discovered to his horror that the corpse they brought out for him had been mutilated, its eyes removed. What was worse, mortuary attendants could not account for how, when or why the body parts got missing.
Narrating the horror, the bereaved mother, Oke Sunday, said: “I delivered my twin girls at the General Hospital Ughelli on January 6, 2017, by Caesarean Section. It was after the delivery, I came back to Port Harcourt. On August 3, 2018, one of the twins, Chuma, took ill and was diagnosed with a shortage of blood as soon as we arrived at the children ward of UPTH, Port Harcourt. The nurses took her blood sample for the test. After then, they showed no urgency in treating the child until she died the next day.”
“Even while the baby was still breathing, one of the nurses had approached me and asked me to pay N30,000 to have the baby buried somewhere. That got me annoyed. From that moment, they became nonchalant, claiming they were waiting for the blood test until the child died,” Her husband, Ede Sunday, also narrated.
The couple also revealed that they subsequently deposited the child’s corpse at the mortuary and travelled to Ughelli where their families had encouraged them to bring the body home for burial.
“I went to the mortuary on September 17 to pay the bill and retrieve the corpse,” continued the distraught dad. “I had N20, 000 with me. But after taking the money, the attendant informed me my total bill was N56, 000. I requested to see the corpse of my baby. But to my surprise, when he brought out the baby’s corpse, the two eyes had been removed.”
“I had called my wife on phone and relayed the news to her. I broke down and wept. I was so angry I wanted to fight the mortuary attendants. Eventually, I abandoned the corpse to them.”
“That very day, I reported the case to the Rivers State Police Command; the next day, I got in touch with my lawyer and we wrote a petition to the Commissioner of Police on September 18.”
On September 20, Sunday, his wife and relatives stormed the mortuary. This time, he alleged, the attendants had presented a corpse whose eyes were plugged with cotton buds.
After a mild drama with mortuary attendants and the hospital management, the family decided to abandon the corpse to them.
“Till today, the question I am asking the mortuary attendants is, what happened to the two eyes of my baby?” Sunday stated.
The family has since resorted to the law by following up their petition to the state’s Commissioner of Police.
Meanwhile, every efforts from to get the another side of the story from the Hospital proved abortive as doctors nor nurses were willing to talk to the reporter. Likewise, the information section of the hospital did not respond to the reporter’s enquiries.
Even at the mortuary, some attendants were on duty, but no one offered any response to the reporter’s questions.
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