The survivor of the July 29, 2020, boat mishap in which 16 people drowned on Badagry waterways, has blamed the incident on greed by boat operators and regulatory officials.
According to Moruf Kelani, a survivor: “Normally, we don’t pay fares until we get to our destination, but that day, the boatman insisted on collecting the money.
He thought that it would be difficult to collect N1,500 from passengers when they arrive Badagry instead of the normal N1200, so he started collecting the fares at the point of departure.
Instead of the assistant boatman to start the boat engine, he was supervising the boatman that was collecting fare until we reached the high sea without starting the engine.
We realized that the high current was pushing the boat near the parked barge around Kirikiri, we shouted at him to start the engine but it was too late as the strong current pushed the boat under the parked barge at Kirikiri.
When the boat capsized, the boatman and his assistant swam out of the lagoon because they were experts. Then, out of the 17 passengers that went down after the boat mishaps, God saved me.
I found myself deep down inside the lagoon, struggling to survive. As I was coming up from the sea struggling to survive, trying to reach the top, my hand touched the boat because the boat sank with us.
Then, suddenly, God gave me an instinct to hold on to the boat that it will float because it was made of fiber. I held onto it with one of my fingers till we reached the top. I can’t see anything and I can’t swim.
After the boat had floated out, I hang my leg around the boat and my head on somewhere on the boat for about 30 minutes with hope that before the boat gets to Liverpool jetty, a saviour will come.
My head was outside and I was able to breath as the high current from the sea was carrying the boat from one place to other.
The rest 16 passengers, including my friend and business partner, Benjamin Ojerinola, perished inside the deep sea due to greed of the boatman.”