Well, yes, because it can very well be argued that they were complicit as their action very nearly helped the assailant complete his heinous crime.
It is unbelievable that this sort of stories still creep out from time to time in Nigeria in the 21st century. And it is particularly astounding that it happened this time not in a mushroom private hospital, but a Naval Hospital.
Mariam Abubakar who had gone to Pearl Harbour Night Club in Rochester Garden Hotel, Festac on October 26 to “catch weekend fun” would have been dead by now but for the spirited efforts of the health officials at Ajeromi General Hospital.
She had allegedly been stabbed by a former councillor of Amuwo-Odofin Local Government Area of Lagos State, Onimole Babatunde, for refusing his advances.
The saving grace of the victim was that police officers at Area E Command were contacted. It was the police who now took it upon themselves to take her to Ajeromi General Hospital. By that time she had lost 20 percent of her blood, and had slipped into coma.
For how long will this atavistic practice of demanding for a police report before saving a dying person persist? High ranking police officers including the IG have said many times that hospitals should not make police report a precondition for treating anyone.
It is high time medical practitioners were prosecuted for refusing or neglecting to save lives on account of police report.
Elsewhere in the world doctors would do all it takes to save a man’s life first and foremost. Questions will be asked later or the police could be contacted. Even prisoners on death row are entitled to medical treatment until their execution is due.
This nonsense must stop.
http://johnaweonline.blogspot.com/2012/11/naval-hospital-ojo-should-be-probed-for.html
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