Photo: stargist.com |
Despite the police
announcing it had commenced investigations into the #SaveMayowa fundraising
campaign, controversy has continued to trail the initiative which was aimed at
raising overseas medical fees for Mayowa Ahmed, a cancer patient receiving
treatment at the Lagos University Teaching Hospital.
Media
report continues:
On
Thursday, police officers broke up a heated exchange outside the hospital
between the patient’s relatives and some social media campaigners who helped
raise funds running into millions of naira for Ms. Ahmed’s treatment.
“The
Command wishes to inform all the good spirited people who had donated
generously to this course that it will ensure it does not return as a hoax and
every outcome of the investigation shall be made open,” Dolapo Badmus, the
Lagos police spokesperson, said while announcing a “full scale” investigation
and a freezing of the campaign’s bank account.
Ms.
Ahmed, 31, had a history and clinical features of an intra-abdominal mass,
according to LUTH, where she was a patient.
She
was brought to the hospital’s private wing on Monday, but barely 24 hours
later, her family insisted on flying her outside the country, stalling “all the
planned investigations meant to arrive at a definite diagnosis,” the hospital
said.
“The
family and the patient brought along some results of laboratory investigations
ordered and done outside LUTH.
“Three
different Specialists were invited to review Mayowa. The Gynaecologist,
Oncologist and Haematologist all arrived at a tentative diagnosis of an
abdominal malignancy.
“They
planned to conduct a series of fresh tests to confirm the definitive diagnosis,
since the earlier tests were neither requested nor authorized by any doctor
from LUTH.”
A scam?
Ms.
Ahmed’s condition prompted an online campaign supported by Nollywood actress,
Toyin Aimakhu, with the hashtag #SaveMayowa aimed at raising money for her
treatment abroad.
The
hashtag gained popularity on social media during the week, and by Wednesday,
over ₦30 million had been raised, according to sources close to the patient’s
family.
But
trouble began on Thursday when the social media campaigners alleged that the
initiative had been a scam because the patient’s family had known she was
“beyond help.”
Angry
campaigners and donors stormed the hospital to confront Ms. Ahmed’s relatives
and it took police intervention to calm frayed nerves.
The
patient’s name, Mayowa, trended on Twitter throughout Thursday with over 11,000
mentions.
According
to Aramide Kasunmu, one of those who led the social media campaign, the family
had said they had contacted Emory Hospital in US and needed US$100,000 for
overseas treatment.
“I
went on social media and Kate Henshaw was asking questions,” Ms. Kasunmu,
founder of Lifestake Foundation, a nongovernmental organisation,” said in a
video she posted on Facebook.
“She
was saying ok where’s the visa? Where’s the ticket? Where’s this where’s that?
And I’m like okay, that’s true, I haven’t even seen those things.
“So
I went back to the Emory Hospital’s list to see exactly what it is that they
wrote there. And I realised that what they said was a US$100,000 deposit, and
it will cost between 3,000 to 30,000 to get her treated. And she needs 10 to 50
sessions. So technically, Mayowa needs over ₦150 million to be treated if she
has to be treated in Atlanta.
“But
then when the doctor (at LUTH) said that she cannot fly, in his words she can’t
even fly to Abuja let alone America, 13 hours. I said okay something isn’t
adding up.
“And
then on Monday, Toyin Aimakhu had gone up, it had gone viral and everything.
And because I had posted it, I went on Facebook and I told my friends to not
get me involved in anything that belongs to Mayowa, basically like a
disclaimer.”
Ms.
Kasunmu said she received a phone call from LUTH on Wednesday informing her
that Ms. Ahmed was leaving the hospital.
“And
I said how come? They said the family said they want to take her abroad. That
she was flying yesterday (Wednesday) night, 6pm. Meanwhile they’d told Toyin
Aimakhu that they were taking her to Reddington.”
“My
concern is, I need to be sure that these people are actually getting Mayowa
treated, that they are not just trying to take advantage of her situation,
which is my fight. Because you got me involved, people are asking questions and
I cannot answer. I sent Mayowa messages she wasn’t responding. I called her
phones nobody was saying anything to me.”
On
Thursday morning, Ms. Kasunmu said she asked a colleague to go to Ms. Ahmed’s
home.
“She
got to the house and said there was nobody at home,” Ms. Kasunmu continued.
“She
called the brother and they said they were at LUTH, she got to LUTH they did
not let her see Mayowa, so she waited.
“I
told her that she must wait, they said their brother came that they were
bringing an air ambulance. We all know air ambulances are not cheap. I said ok
that she must wait for that air ambulance, she must see the air ambulance take
Mayowa and she must video it so that I can at least say you guys are asking me
questions, see Mayowa she has travelled. That was my intention.
“Then
she said her brother wasn’t talking to her, that the brother said they have
given a statement and nobody should get involved in their case.
“I
was like, we raised money from the public, we had stood in front for you guys,
how can you guys say that we should no longer get involved? That was when the
alarm bells went off.”
Ms.
Kasunmu said the campaign raised N85 million, and not N30 million as claimed by
Ms. Ahmed’s family.
“They
said they have a visa when they didn’t have a visa. They solicited funds that
they were going to America, now they are saying they are going to Dubai. A lot
of things were not adding up and they were not being straightforward.”
Ms.
Aimakhu corroborated most of what Ms. Kasunmu said, adding that things got
dramatic on Thursday after the patient’s family insisted she leave the hospital
despite her efforts in helping raise funds for treatment.
“There’s
nobody I didn’t call,” Ms. Aimakhu told Y’Naija on Thursday, of her efforts at
fundraising.
“(I)
called E-Money, called Okorocha’s so, called AY, called everybody. Only for me
to get here, after they’ve gotten the money….
“Something
just came to my mind there is something, how can you help people raise money
and you are saying…. no, there’s more to this.
“And
yesterday, a lot of people called me, that they privatised their account. I had
to call them that they should not put the account on private.
“They
said I did not help her (Ms. Ahmed) to raise money, that I only came to visit
her.”
But
a person close to Ms. Ahmed’s family, Kunle Oduah, accused Ms Kasunmu and Ms.
Aimakhu of trying to hijack the campaign.
“Tomorrow
they will come and claim they are standing for women’s rights,” Mr. Oduah wrote
on Facebook, while posting photos of himself and Ibrahim Ahmed, Ms. Ahmed’s
brother.
“The
fact behind the girl’s ordeal was that the lady called Aramide Kasunmu of
Lifestake foundation approached the family that she is floating an NGO, asked
them to open the account on her foundation account and the family refused
bluntly.
“She
was the one that called Toyin Aimaku to appear at the hospital as a celebrity
to boost the donation, with promise of giving her some incentives.
“That
was why they were accusing the family of not letting them to know how the money
would be used.”
Mr.
Oduah said people had kept donating to the #SaveMayowa campaign despite the
family already meeting the target.
“That’s
humanity,” he said.
“Those who did it sowed a seed of faith on her strength to pull through. Why try to ruin that? And most of this is caused by illiteracy.”
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