The in-laws of the lawyer on trial for stabbing her husband to death in
Ibadan,have spoken out. Elder brother to Mr Lowo Oyediran, who was
allegedly murdered by his wife in Ibadan, Oyo State, on Tuesday,, Mr
Adewale Adelani Oyediran, Abisola and Bunmi, his (Adelani’s) daughter
and wife, respectively, spoke to the
Nigerian Tribune's Oluwole Ige on the matter
What was your relationship with the deceased?
Honestly, I don’t know how to describe myself; I was like a father to him.
How did you feel when you learned of his alleged killing?
I felt devastated, confounded. I could not imagine that Lowo, with whom I
spoke five days before that fateful day, could have life snuffed out of
him in his prime. Lowo was everything to the family. He was the bridge
between the old and the young. He unified everybody in the family. He
was a comforter to everybody. I sponsored his university education. I
never knew that I was never going to see Lowo again. He always said that
‘I know we don’t have money in our family, but daddy, if God spares my
life, I would put smile on the face of everybody.’ He was struggling. He
attended Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife, from where he moved
to France to continue his post-graduate programme. Since 2006, he only
came back to Nigeria in 2012. His wedding was on 8 February and 9
February, 2013. We sponsored the ceremonies. If there was a comedian in
the family, it was Lowo. He had a high sense of humour. We were jolted
when we were informed that Lowo had been stabbed to death by his wife.
When we got to the police station at Akobo, there was pandemonium. There
was wailing. All the family members had converged on the police
station. From there, we moved to the house with the landlord and
policemen. The landlord did not mince words in his statement that it was
Yewande that slaughtered him. He disclosed that in her first attempt to
kill Lowo, she only succeeded in stabbing him in the armpit and on the
back. He was rushed to the hospital. After he was treated, they went
back home and the landlord tried to settle their dispute. They did not
go to bed until about 3.00 in the morning. The landlord said he even
advised Lowo to sleep in his apartment but he said there was no need for
that since the quarrel had been settled. The landlord said some minutes
past 6.00 a.m., there was a cry for help from Lowo’s flat and people
rushed out only to find that he had been stabbed, again, in the neck by
his wife when he was sleeping. Lowo managed to take a few steps
afterwards and slumped just as he got outside. If he was not asleep, it
would not have been possible for his wife to overpower him...
The wife had previously boasted to the woman that took her husband to
the hospital after the first attack that what she did was just a tip of
the iceberg. The woman said she was oblivious of the seriousness of her
statement because all she was concerned about at the time was to save
Lowo’s life, otherwise she would have recorded her statement. The police
had invited the woman to give her statement concerning the incident.
The doctor who treated Lowo had also been invited by the police. This is
a clear case of murder. The knife that she used to stab Lowo was found
in the pool of his blood. It is in the picture. The only thing that is
giving us concern is that we cannot find his cell phone. The world is a
global village and it would be easy to get his last conversation on the
phone through the GSM network provider. His death is a colossal loss to
us. We had to take our aged mother to Ife under the pretext that she was
going to see her doctor so that she would not know what had happened.
For the fact that Lowo spoke with her about four days earlier, she could
not suspect that he had died.
Lowo’s death is like a conspiracy, a grand design to just snuff the life
out of him. If you look at the picture of the first and second
attempts, you will know what I am talking about. They were married for
about three years, but Lowo had a girlfriend in France and along the
line, she got pregnant for him and bore him a male child about a year
ago. But, Lowo’s wife stumbled on that information and that was the
genesis of the crisis. Since then, there had been angry disputes between
them. I was aware that Yewande’s family invited them and settled the
matter. Her parents told her to accept what had happened because there
was nothing she could do about it. Perhaps she had a plan unknown to
Lowo. I remember that Lowo confided in me that Yewande told him that he
should not let our family know about his girlfriend who had had a child
for him back in France.
What is the situation now?
We are worried about the desperation of Yewande’s parents. Her father is
a retired permanent secretary. Former Governor Rashidi Ladoja was the
chairman of Lowo’s wedding ceremony. Besides, Yewande works as a counsel
in the Oyo State Ministry of Justice, at the Department of Public
Prosecution (DPP). If an incident of this nature happens, it is her
office that treats it and makes recommendations for trial.
Before this incident, was there any time that you settled a quarrel between the couple?
Honestly, there was never a time that we settled a dispute for them. The
only thing we noticed was that on their wedding day, she was brought
here so that they could pour water on her legs. They wanted to get water
from a bowl but she refused. So, we had to get bottled water and then
the wife of the Olufi of Gbongan poured the water on her feet. That was
the last time we saw Yewande. There was not even a phone call from her.
Before the wedding, when Lowo complained, I said it was not by force;
that we should call off the wedding if necessary. All along, whenever
they fought, Lowo would say that her father was a very good man. With
the way they are acting, we hope that the Ministry of Justice where
Yewande works will not pervert the course of justice in this matter. We
are not ready to tinker with anything but let justice be done.
Do you know how they met?
They met the way every other man and woman would meet. Coincidentally,
Yewande’s younger sister is also married to somebody from Gbongan. They
are in America. Now, somebody in France did not want to marry a French
national. He preferred a Nigerian who was educated and reliable and
within five months, they met. It was my wife who bankrolled the journey
of Yewande to Dubai, where they met.
What does the family want now?
We want justice and fairness. We want justice to take its full course so
that the matter will not be swept under the carpet. The news is all
over the world. Somebody just called me from Canada about it. Justice
must not be subverted. I asked Yewande’s father how he would feel if it
was his daughter that was killed. What they would be planning now is how
to defend Yewande in court. We cannot find Lowo’s international
passports. They have packed everything, both his Nigerian and French
passports. The documents of his company, we could not find them. His
business partner in Sweden, whom we called, said all the original
documents were with Lowo in Nigeria. He said that he only had the
photocopies. Lowo’s death has created a big vacuum in our family that
will be difficult to fill. He was just 38 years old, cut down in his
prime.
I couldn’t go to their house ‘cos of her —Abisola, Lowo’s niece
How would you describe Lowo’s death?
I would describe it as disaster. It was not expected at all. The morning
of the incident, I woke up in tears even without knowing that something
terrible had happened. I went into my dad’s room and asked if he slept
well. I told my mum about the tears in my eyes and the dream I had. So,
we decided to pray. But my father’s brother called us about five times.
My mum asked dad to answer the call, so he picked up the phone and said,
‘Deji, I will call you back. We are praying.’ But Uncle Deji asked my
dad not to hang up the phone. He said Uncle Lowo had been killed. After
they got married, Yewande chased everybody away. I couldn’t go to their
house because of her.
When the incident happened and we got to the police station, Lowo’s
corpse was not there and Yewande was not there. We learnt that she was
in the hospital, receiving treatment. Their landlord told us that when
she first stabbed him, she threatened that ‘I will kill you today.’ The
killing was absurd.
I helped her marry him, now she’s killed him –Bunmi Oyediran, sister-in-law
You facilitated Yewande’s visit to Lowo, how?
I bought the air ticket for Yewande to meet Lowo in Dubai. Now, she has
killed him. If you called Lowo and he was with his wife, he would say ‘I
will call you back.’ He had so much fear for his wife. If his wife was
not around, he would call and say that we should come and play with him.
Since the day of her wedding, Yewande never stepped into this house.
Her father even called me one day after the wedding, cursing me that I
did not put clothes in her wedding box. My husband trained Lowo after he
left secondary school. Lowo was everything to me. He understood me and
knew everything about me. If I was angry, they would call Lowo to talk
to me. They have taken him away from me. I cannot see Lowo again!
Yewande’s father was begging me yesterday. For what, after the deed has
been done? When I was pregnant with my youngest child, I never knew.
Lowo encouraged me to take a medical test, which confirmed the
pregnancy. This was because I was already over 40 years when I got
pregnant. Lowo said I should come to France and relax because of my age.
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