When a young undergraduate suddenly commits suicide,
neighbours and friends are bound to draw various conclusions.
Till date, people are wondering why an undergraduate of the
University of Lagos identified simply as Seun committed suicide on January 19.
His action has left his family and friends in shock.
Claims by neighbours that he was a brilliant student in
school could not be ascertained as efforts to investigate which department he
was, proved abortive.
He lived with his aunt at 9, Alhaja Adijat Lawal, Beesam,
Mafoluku, Lagos, where the incident was said to have occurred.
When our correspondent paid the family a visit, Seun’s aunt
was still in shock.
“Please, I cannot say anything because this is a big tragedy
for us,” said the woman, who did not give her name, said.
But some neighbours who spoke to our correspondent gave an
insight into the kind of person Seun was and the circumstances surrounding his
alleged suicide.
Most of those who spoke declined to give their names because
they fear the deceased’s family might not look kindly upon them for speaking on
their tragedy.
A young woman said of Seun, “I knew he was a student. I just
did not know he attended UNILAG. He was an easy going and quiet man. We
probably would have been close if he was not the quiet type.
“The day of the incident, I just got home from an errand and
I was told Seun had been rushed to a hospital. When I asked what happened, I
was told he went out to buy a substance and locked himself inside his room.
“I still don’t know what happened to make him take that
action. I think those in the house when he went to buy the substance must have
suspected he was going to do something drastic because they later forced the
door open, but he had already ingested the substance he went to buy. They
quickly took him to the hospital.”
It was learnt that Seun died later that evening in the
hospital.
The young woman who spoke with our correspondent said she
did not know the hospital Seun was taken to for treatment.
Our correspondent went to St. Nicholas Clinic, which was the
nearest to the street to find out if any young man was brought there on January
19 for suspected poison ingestion. A nurse, who identified herself as Ibidun,
said their records showed no such thing.
A beer joint operator on a street adjacent to Seun’s street
said he knew the deceased too. But he could only remember him as “a very quiet
young man of about 27 years old.”
The young woman who had earlier spoken with our
correspondent put Seun’s age at around 28.
Suicides are still seen as taboo in many parts of Nigeria, a
reason family and friends of victims would rather not speak about it in public.
“Please, whatever you want to know, I think it is better you
speak with the family,” a tailor around the building where Seun lived told our
correspondent.
Seun’s suicide remains shrouded in mystery more because the
police have said no report was made about it.
Public Relations Officer of the Airport Police Command,
Lagos, Mr. Dennis Ifijen, said, “We have no record of the case. I have not
heard about it.”
Seun is the second undergraduate of UNILAG to commit suicide
in the last one month, Saturday PUNCH learnt.
On New Year’s Eve, Damilola Durojaiye, a computer science
student of the university, also allegedly committed suicide at his parents’
Akute-Ajuwon, Ogun State home.
The 19-year-old was said to be a brilliant student with a
cumulative grade point average of about 3.9.
He reportedly stayed at home when his parents went for the
cross-over service, only for them to come back and see his body dangling from
where he hanged himself.
The Police Public Relations Officer in the state, Mr. Muyiwa
Adejobi, said at the time that a suicide note was found where Durojaiye hung
himself.
It probably may never be known what drove Seun to consider
suicide as the way out like Durojaiye, but the incident is a pointer to the
fact that problems faced by youths in the country are increasingly becoming
psychological.
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