Nathaniel Solomon: ‘I saw 4 corpses at Lekki Tollgate’

A man who identified himself as Nathaniel Solomon said he saw about four bodies on the ground when he went to pick his brother’s remains at Lekki Tollgate in the aftermath of the shootings by soldiers on October 20.

Solomon was one of the complainants at the Lagos State Court of Arbitration and Mediation in Lekki, venue of Lagos State Judicial Panel of Enquiry and Restitution for Victims of SARS-related abuses and other matters.

He said his younger brother, Abouta Solomon, was shot dead and had since been buried in his hometown in Mubi Local Government Area of Adamawa State.

Solomon, displaying a picture of Abouta lying dead on the grass, narrated how he found his brother’s corpse.

He said: “The person in the picture is my younger brother, Abouta Solomon. We’re from Mubi North Local Government Area of Adamawa State.

“My brother was shot at Lekki Tollgate, on October 20. It was the Army that shot him.”

Asked why he felt it was the Army, Solomon said: “Because some boys that he was with told us that he had been shot, so we rushed there and picked up his corpse.

“I didn’t know when my brother left home for the tollgate. He never told me he was going there. He was living with me here in Lekki, at Marwa area.

“Some boys called me. By then, my phone battery was flat and the phone had gone off. They called one of our brothers and told him that Abouta had been killed.

“His corpse was at Lekki Tollgate. There were people around at the time; protesters. He was laid on the grass in the middle of the road. He was already dead.

“We took him to St Paul’s Mortuary at Oyingbo. One of my brothers had a car, so we drove down there.”

Nathaniel said they first went to the Lagos Island General Hospital, but were told there was no space.

“They directed us to Oyingbo and we began driving around until we found the place. It’s on Ibadan Street. We kept his corpse there. The next day at about 4p.m., we took the corpse and travelled to the village and buried him.

“Everyone was there— my family, my village people. The name of the village is Keria, in Mubi North, Feli area.”

Solomon alleged that he saw other corpses at the tollgate, when he went to pick his brother.

He said: “That night when we took my brother’s corpse, we saw other people who had been shot; about four of them, on the floor. They were dead.

“I didn’t see any soldiers around. This was about 11p.m. I didn’t see any policemen, too.”

Responding to the question whether he informed government authorities about his brother’s death, Nathaniel said no, but that it was common knowledge in his neighbourhood.

“Everybody in Marwa knows,” he said, adding that despite online offers of cash assistance for Lekki shooting victims or their families, nobody approached him with help.

He further added that no one had induced him with money to keep quiet about Abouta’s death.

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