Controversy
trails death of Ngige's aide
From
Vanguard
By
Tony Edike
Monday,
November 29, 2004
ENUGU — THE
mysterious death in an American hospital of a female Special
Assistant to Anambra State Governor, Miss Ego Theresa Nkwoka
is now the source of a brewing rift between the state government
and her family. The deceased Special Assistant attached to
the Abuja Liaison Office of the Anambra State Government, who
hailed from Abatete in Idemili North Local Government Area
reportedly died of a complications arising from a six-month
old pregnancy at the University of Brooklyn Hospital, New York.
The lady,
according to sources at the University of Nigeria Teaching
Hospital (UNTH) Enugu, where she was first admitted, was treated
for Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) characterized by severe
abdominal pain. The cause of the disease, as learnt, was traced
to a failed attempt at aborting the pregnancy.
Her condition,
however, continued to deteriorate prompting the doctors at
the Teaching Hospital to recommend further treatment abroad.
She was therefore flown to New York under the sponsorship of
the state government and accompanied by a government official.
She reportedly died less than a week after arriving the American
hospital. Ego’s remains were flown back to the country
on November 8 and were subsequently brought down to Enugu via
a Sosoliso Airline Flight and deposited at the Eastern Nigeria
Medical Centre, Enugu by Aroh.
Sources
close to the Nkwoka family of Abatete told reporters in Enugu
at the weekend that a section of the family was unhappy with
the "mystery" surrounding the death of the lady, stressing
that the family was kept in the dark about the real cause of
her death and details of her treatment in various hospitals.
The family,
sources further said, was particularly irked by reports that
a top government official was responsible for the pregnancy
that allegedly led to her death, and demanded that a thorough
investigation be carried out into the entire affair with a
view to unearthing the truth about her demise.
"We didn’t
even know when she was flown abroad. We only received the news
that she was dead and that her corpse had been brought back
and kept at Enugu. We were later told that her remains would
be brought home for burial. We are not happy with this mystery
and we want the government to tell us the truth about her death," a
member of the family said.
When contacted,
however, the governor’s Special Assistant on Legislative
Matters, Chief Okey Aroh, confirmed that Ego died at the Brooklyn
Hospital but strongly denied that her death was traceable to
any pregnancy. He claimed that she had been treated for meningitis
back home in Nigeria but had to travel to America for "a rest".
According
to him, Ego on arrival started complaining of headache and
went to the hospital where her condition rapidly deteriorated
and she died. "There is nothing mysterious about Ego’s
death. She was not pregnant at all. She had meningitis and
was treated here but apparently the treatment was not the best.
She traveled to America to rest but a week after her arrival,
she started complaining of headache and went to the hospital.
The rest is history."
He described
the alleged controversy surrounding the lady’s death
as "a political fairytale" being spread by opponents of the
state government, adding that the family was fully aware of
the lady’s condition and subsequent death.
Aroh, also
a native of Abatete, said the lady was buried last weekend
without any trouble as her father could attest.