Shiites: Corps member serving with Channels TV died after several hospitals refused to treat him because he had gunshot wounds



Shiites: Corps member serving with Channels TV died after several hospitals refused to treat him because he had gunshot wound
PRECIOUS OWOLABI





Precious Owolabi, the 23-year-old youth corps member serving in Channels TV who was killed in the cross fire between the Police and Shi'ites members in Abuja yesterday July 22nd, died after several hospitals he was rushed to allegedly rejected him.



A colleague of the deceased, Chamberlain Usoh hinted on this while speaking on Channels TV live this morning.



Speaking, Chamberlain said



''Given what transpired, there are many ifs and buts because following the accounts of how he eventually lost his life, when he was shot and the stray bullet hit him, they had been taken him to several hospitals and it is one of the issues that we raise consistently on this programme, how that needs to become history in this country where when people are taken to the hospital, the hospitals for one reason or the other, you find out that for one reason or the other, treatments cannot be adminsitered on accident victims because in many cases, it is no fault of theirs. 
We do know that we have taken the Former Minister of Health on this issue and he said that the hospitals have got to treat these people. The National Assembly also waded in on this particular scenario. It turns out that it is not yet been fully implemented''.



President Buhari on December 29th 2017, signed into law the Compulsory Treatment and Care for Victims of Gunshot Act, 2017 and Anti-Torture Act, 2017. The act provides for the compulsory treatment and care for victims of gunshots and for related matters. The Act stipulates that a person with a gunshot wound shall be received for immediate and adequate treatment by any hospital in Nigeria with or without initial monetary deposit. Furthermore, a person with a gunshot wound shall not be subjected to inhuman and degrading treatment or torture by any person or authority, including the police and other security agencies.



The act appears not to have been fully implemented by many hospitals.

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