Aisha Goni Lawal and her daughter, Aisha, at the National Hospital, Abuja
At only 14 months old, baby Aisha Lawal, her own
mother’s namesake, has been in hospital for a year and two months with
severe burns over nearly half her body.
Her hospitalization started in
Maiduguri where her family fled on foot and bicycle after Boko Haram
attacked their village in Bama, bombing and razing houses to the ground.
Recently her family has managed to get to National Hospital, Abuja,
where she underwent a four-hour surgery. Surgeons used flesh from her
thigh to reconstruct her eyelids, adding flesh to the top and bottom
lids.
One of Aisha’s upper eyelids had been turned inside out, and doctors
said leaving it unfixed meant Aisha could lose the eye itself due to
unprotected exposure. The blast she survived had welded her left arm to
her armpit.
Surgeons did a skin graft to free the arm from the
attachment. Scar tissue and burnt skin still cover visible parts of her
body and half her head. The rest of her not visible is wrapped in
bandage.
After days in trauma and intensive care unit at the hospital, where Vice
President Yemi Osinbajo visited her family, she and her parents-Aisha
and Ibrahim Goni Lawal-are now in the hospital’s private wing, with
treatment privately paid for by Vice President Yemi Osinbajo. Daily
Trust met the family.
Daily Trust: Where were you when the attack took place?
Ibrahim Goni: We were in Bama. It was early, around five in the
morning. I was in the mosque but my wife and baby were at home. That
was when they attacked the town. Suddenly we heard gunshots. There were
soldiers in the town at that time, that’s why we had courage to stay on
before it happened.
That morning of the attack, Boko Haram insurgents set our house on fire,
with my daughter inside. It was her mother who went into the room to
get her. She saved her from the fire.
[Aisha’s] grandmother and my wife took her and left the town. They hired
a bicycle. They were carried on the bicycle into the bush along the
road to Maiduguri. They spent up to three days in the bush before they
reached Maiduguri. They went to a hospital there.
DT: Where were you at that time?
Aisha Lawal: I was in the bathroom. I had just bathed baby
Aisha, and she was in the bedroom. I had the baby dressed before I was
bathing too. I heard gunshots so I tried to put on my clothes. My baby
was crying. I came out running. The house was on fire, and my baby, too.
I ran in and pulled her by the leg and brought her out.
She was already burning and screaming when I brought her out. I removed
her clothes, which were on fire. I put her in my hijab and ran out with
her. We went straight into the bush. The father had fled from the
mosque. He didn’t enter the house. From the bush we emerged in a village
whose name I don’t know.
DT: How was baby Aisha then?
Ibrahim: She was crying all through. It was at that village
that we hired a bicycle for N1,500. Some people helped us, the moment
they saw our situation. The person we hired the bicycle from rode it. We
were brought to Konduga on the bicycle and from there buses took us to
Maiduguri. They were taking people from Konduga to Maiduguri. There were
so many people waiting, the buses had to come back and forth.
DT: How long was the journey from when you entered the bush in Bama to Maiduguri?
Aisha: Forty-five kilometers. We walked more than 45km on foot.
We met my husband at the motor park in Maiduguri, where he was already
waiting for us.
Ibrahim:
When you come to Maiduguri, you don’t enter. You stay on the
outskirts. If your people are aboard the inbound vehicle, you meet them.
If they are not, you wait for them before you can continue the journey.
We went to Costain Hospital in Maiduguri. We paid for the treatment.
Doctor asked when we came, ‘who’s baby is this’? We came forward, and
has asked if we had money to treat her. I said yes, we have N20,000.
They wrote prescriptions, and I bought the drugs, and they worked on
her. For four months, they were writing out prescriptions.
DT: How did you come to Abuja?
Ibrahim: The Vice President [Yemi Osinbajo] came to Costain to
see people affected [in the attack]. Many were pointed out to him. [That
was July 1, 2015]. That’s when he said, this particular one, I will
handle her treatment personally, and it is not from government money, it
will be from my pocket.
One of her eyes doesn’t close, so they said they will work on it so it
closes. They have separated her arm from her armpit, which was fused
before. Just the hand is left. They have told us that when she grows a
little, they can continue work on the hand. They said they will give us
time until they finish the work.
DT: How did you manage with her before now?
Ibrahim: Nothing. We couldn’t do anything. We didn’t have any
drugs to give her, couldn’t put anything on her skin. We just held her
that way.
DT: How do you handle your daughter’s care?
Ibrahim: We don’t bathe her. There’s need for it, but we can’t do that. We just clean her up. There are so many bandages on her.
DT: What would you want done to the perpetrators, if they are caught?
Ibrahim: Whatever punishment the government deems fit.
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