On Wednesday
Business activities at Dana office located at Allen Avenue Ikeja was put on
hold, after Pastor Daniel Omowunmi, the owner of the two-storey building
destroyed by the ill-fated Dana plane, locked the main gate of the premises
with chains and a padlock and also blocked the entrance with his Toyota SUV.
A
correspondent of the PUNCH newspaper who was present at the location, who was
equally assaulted by one of the policemen, Giwa Mohammed, drafted to help ease
the situation gives an account of the event.
In his
words, “Omowunmi, who arrived Dana office at 5.30am, brought with him three
iron chains and padlock which he used to lock out all employees of the company.
The
ill-fated Dana flight 992 killed over 153 people on board, as well as
approximately 10 other persons and caused injuries to many people on the
ground.
The plane
also crashed into Daniel’s house and factory and destroyed his property, which
he said, was worth N500m.
Omowunmi
told our correspondent that he decided to lock up the place because all
attempts to get compensation from Dana had proved abortive.
He said,
“In some weeks’ time, it will be a year that the plane crash occurred. I have
not been working up till now. They destroyed my properties and rendered me
jobless since June 3, 2012. Dana has commenced operation but it has not said
anything meaningful about my case.
“Officials
of the company have been going on air with all sorts of propaganda claiming
that they have settled all those affected. That is why I have come here so that
they can come out to tell me the kind of arrangements they have made, the
amount they paid and who they gave it to.”
The
pastor said the N500m he lost to the crash represented the value of his
warehouse, publishing house, fish ponds and other businesses.
He said
so far, only $30,000 (N4.8m) had been given to him by the company.
He said,
“My properties are four plots of land with a detached six-bedroom building, two
standard warehouses, a bungalow at the back of the warehouses and four fish
ponds. Everything was destroyed, including my second jeep parked on the
premises. My furniture, six container loads of books and five container loads
of kitchen utensils all destroyed.
“Up till
today, they have not said anything tangible and yet they are flying. If they
think they will carry on with business like that and it is going to be easy,
they must be joking.
“The
claim I put before them is about N500m and up till now, the only thing they
have made available to me after much pressure was $30,000 dollars to rent a
house. After that, they have not been forthcoming. My lawyer actually persuaded
me to collect the money.”
The area
was tense as over 20 employees of the company waited outside the company and in
the rain, which started around 4am.
Some of
the employees, including an Indian, appealed to the pastor to open the gate and
seek alternative means of pressing home his point but he refused.
Around
9am however, a team of policemen stormed the vicinity and one of the policemen,
Corporal Giwa Mohammed, dragged the pastor into a Rapid Response Squad patrol
vehicle with registration number 195LA.
A few
minutes later, senior officers attached to Area F Command arrived at the scene
and appealed to Omowunmi to unlock the gate.
Omowunmi,
while fighting back tears, said life had become unbearable for him and he had
been pushed to the wall.
He said,
“I have not been able to meet my obligations to my family. I have three
children. For the first time in my life, I had to get money from people to pay
my children’s school fees last week.”
After
much persuasion, however, the pastor unlocked the gate and followed the
policemen to Area F.
It was
learnt that the area commander, Tunde Adagunduro, had written a letter to the
management of Dana, inviting them to a meeting with the pastor to prevent
another episode.
When
contacted on the telephone, the spokesperson for the airline, Tony Usidamen,
said he was aware of the protest but could not confirm if Omowunmi’s claims
were true since it was the insurance company that was in charge of compensation
and not Dana.
He said,
“I know some people have been compensated and I know that he (Omowunmi) was
given some money. I however do not know the level of compensation because Dana
does not handle compensation rather; the insurance company does.
“I will find out tomorrow to
know how far with his payments. Our duty is to pay premium to insurance company
and we just follow up to know the level of compensation.”
Source and Picture Credit: PUNCH newspaper
Source and Picture Credit: PUNCH newspaper
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