8 Lagos Children Die In Locked SUV, Police Commence Probe
Lagos State Commissioner of Police, Hakeem Odumosu

The families of eight children have been thrown into heavy mourning following the discovery of the corpses of their children from a Honda Sport Utility Vehicle parked on Adelayo Street, in the Jah-Michael area, Badagry Expressway, Lagos State.

Africa Today News, New York gathered that the vehicle was parked in front of a house where the victims entered it.

The kids were said to be playing inside the SUV when they mistakenly locked themselves in as efforts to unlock the door proved abortive.

It was further learnt that it was while a parent was searching for the children, that their remains inside the vehicle was discovered.

The parent was said to have raised the alarm, attracting other parents and residents.

A video clip recorded shortly after the victims’ corpses were recovered from the vehicle, showed their remains lying motionless on the floor.

As residents lamented the tragic incident, which happened on Saturday, December 4, 2021, they called for an investigation to ascertain the circumstances surrounding the death of the children.

The names of the victims were given as Mamod, Aisha, Zainab, Farida, Yakubu, Tayab, Wahab and one other.

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The state Police Public Relations Officer, CSP Adekunle Ajisebutu, in a statement on Sunday, said the state Commissioner of Police, Hakeem Odumosu, had ordered a probe into the incident, adding that the corpses had been deposited in a morgue.

He said, ‘The eight children while playing were said to have mistakenly locked themselves in an abandoned car. Their bodies have been recovered and deposited in the Badagry General Hospital’s morgue for autopsies in order to determine the actual cause of death.

‘Notwithstanding the report made to the police, the Commissioner of Police, Hakeem Odumosu, has ordered a thorough and speedy investigation into the circumstances surrounding their death. The CP also commiserates with the families of the victims.’

However, a consultant family physician at the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital, Ikeja, Dr Oluwajimi Sodipo, said it might take between six and eight hours for the children to die from asphyxiation or excessive heat.

He noted that an autopsy, including a toxicology test, should be conducted on the victims to ascertain the cause of death.

Sodipo, while urging parents and guardians to monitor their children closely, advised that the child protection services in the country should be strengthened.

AFRICA TODAY NEWS, NEW YORK

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