The Lagos State
Police Command on Friday rescued a woman, Taiwo Momoh, as she attempted to jump
into the lagoon from the Third Mainland Bridge, while fishermen resued another,
Mrs. Abigail Ogunyinka, the Ebute-Ero end of the Lagos lagoon.
Ogunyinka, a
food vendor, was said to have jumped already but was rescued by nearby
fishermen.
Both women said
they are heavily indebted. Ogunyinka said she owed a microfinance bank N150,000
This is coming
less than one week after a medical doctor, Allwell Orji, jumped from the same
bridge into the lagoon in an apparent suicide.
The same day
Orji took his own life in a case that has attracted attention nationwide,
another woman was rescued in Mazamaza area of Lagos after she jumped inside the
lagoon.
The Commissioner
of Police, Lagos State Command, Mr. Fatai Owoseni, told newsmen at the
headquarters of the Rapid Response Squad in Lagos on Friday that Momoh was in a
taxi heading towards Oworonshoki on the Third Mainland Bridge when she told the
taxi driver to stop on the bridge.
Owoseni said the
woman was about to jump into the water when a police patrol team on a routine
patrol on the Third Mainland Bridge sighted her and rushed to save her.
She was caught
before she could jump.
“She attempted
suicide by trying to jump into the Lagoon around Oworonshoki end of the
Mainland on the Third Mainland Bridge. Fortunately for her, she was rescued,”
Owoseni said.
The CP explained
that after interacting with the woman, she revealed that she had been depressed
as a result of a huge debt. “Right now, the woman is still in trauma. She is
still insisting that she wants to end her life,” the police boss said.
Owoseni noted
that committing suicide was an offence under the law but that the police would
try to talk the woman out of committing suicide. He said the woman would be
taken through a post-trauma programme to restore her hope in life. Owoseni
assured that the police would do a medical evaluation on her to ascertain her
current condition, but lamented that the rate at which people commit suicide in
the country was worrisome.
“The police have
begun patrol of bridges across the state to forestall other cases of suicide,”
he said.
Owoseni said the
police would no longer allow individuals to walk on bridges in the state and that
no vehicle would be allowed to stop on any bridge in the state to prevent
suicides.
As Momoh was
being led from the RRS headquarters into a waiting police vehicle, she told
journalists that she was not a criminal and they should get their cameras out
of her presence.
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