Photo Of Police Inspector’s Wife Who Was Killed By Customs Officers In Lagos

According to a PUNCH Metro report, the family of Patience Oni has 
been thrown into mourning after she was allegedly killed by officers of 
the Nigeria Customs Service in the Badagry area of Lagos State.
It was gathered that the Customs officers attached to the Seme 
Border Command, reportedly led by one Abu Yusuf, were trying to evacuate
 bags of smuggled rice found around the F. O. Filing Station in the 
Badagry area of the state on Tuesday, November 20, 2018.
PUNCH Metro reports that the officers allegedly shot in the air to 
scare people away and to prevent the residents from disturbing the 
evacuation of the bags of smuggled rice.
It was gathered that Patience, who had gone to the market situated 
around the scene of the operation, was said to have been hit by a stray 
bullet allegedly fired by the officers.
The deceased’s husband, John Oni, said Patience, while struggling 
for life, gave a good Samaritan her phone to call him, adding that she 
was dead before he could get to the Badagry General Hospital.
The 45-year-old police inspector said, “A good Samaritan, who 
was at the scene of the incident, called to inform me that my wife had 
been shot. When I rushed to the scene, I was told that she was still 
alive and that the Customs officers had rushed her to the Badagry 
General Hospital. I am yet to recover from the shock of not meeting her 
alive when I got to the hospital.
“I learnt that the Customs officers were chasing after some 
smugglers carrying rice before they opened fire on some boys, who 
reportedly struggled with them. I was told that my wife was at the bus 
stop close to a filling station around the Badagry roundabout where she 
was hit by a stray bullet from the Customs officers’ guns.
“I want the government to help me fight for my right, because 
my late wife was my helper. I have four children who are still in 
school, and I don’t know how I will cope without her. My life is 
ruined.”
The deceased’s son, Liberty, said his mother was a pillar to the 
family, adding that the trigger-happy officers, who allegedly killed 
her, must be prosecuted.
The deceased’s elder sister, Ruth, 38, said Patience’s death was 
untimely, adding that the family wanted justice but did not know how to 
get it.
PUNCH Metro reports that a bystander, Jimoh Aminu, 43, was also hit
 by the stray bullets allegedly fired by the customs officers during the
 operation but survived.
The Lagos State Police Public Relations Officer, CSP Chike Oti, 
said a team of Customs officers, while on an operation in the Badagry 
area of the state, fired indiscriminately and allegedly killed a 
bystander.
Oti said, “On Tuesday, November 20, 2018, around 1pm, a team of
 Nigeria Customs Service officers attached to the Seme Border Command, 
led by DSC Abu Yusuf, while on ‘Anti-Flying Operations’ at the Badagry 
roundabout by F.O. Filling Station along the Lagos/Badagry Expressway, 
allegedly fired indiscriminately in the area.
“Consequently, bullets hit two bystanders, identified as 
Patience Oni, 42, and Jimoh Aminu, 43. The injured victims were rushed 
to the Badagry General Hospital for treatment, where the former 
eventually died. The remains of the deceased were deposited in the 
hospital’s morgue for autopsy. Meanwhile, the seven Customs officers 
have been arrested and handed over to homicide detectives at the State 
Criminal Intelligence and Investigation Department for thorough 
investigation.”
The Public Relations Officer, Seme Border Command, NCS, Saidu 
Abdullahi, said the death of Patience was unfortunate, adding that the 
officers, who were conduting an operation to evacuate smuggled rice, 
fired shots in the air to scare those preventing them from carrying out 
the operation.
Abdullahi said, “The command regrets the accident; we pray that
 the soul of the deceased rest in peace and hopes that the family is 
granted fortitude to bear the loss. Based on the incident report, the 
officers were carrying out their statutory duty. They found out that 
there were over 120 bags of rice in a warehouse around F. O. Filling 
Station. So, the officers went there to evacuate the rice and in the 
process of moving the evacuated items back to the station, they were 
waylaid by a mob.
“In order to get out, they fired some shots in the air, which 
unfortunately resulted in the death of that woman. The officers were 
shooting in the air to scare the crowd so that they could move the 
items. The woman who died that day was just an unfortunate victim; we 
were later informed that the team took her to the hospital where she 
died.”
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