Ten
months after the death of Nigeria's all-time leading scorer, Rashidi
Yekini, his lawyer, Mohammed Olanrewaju, has alleged that his client was
killed.
The lawyer has also fingered members of Yekini's family as accomplices in his death.
"If I'm to file a charge against anybody it will be against his mother, his immediate sister and two brothers.
"Yekini
was forcefully taken out of his house in Ibadan by herbalists and his
mother was present during all of this. He was hit in the head with some
charm-like stuff before he was locked in chains and taken away to Apete
area in Ibadan.
"He
was kept there for about three weeks during this time I had no access
to him. His immediate sister, Rufiat, later told me he was chained down
for this whole period and that her brother begged to allow him talk to
me so that he can tell me what was being done to him. They rejected his
pleas because they knew if I knew his whereabouts I'll rally round and
ensure he's freed from that place," claimed Barrister Olanrewaju during a
sports programme on a Lagos-based radio station, Top FM, Tuesday.
"I
also wrote to the Nigeria Police informing them about the death of
Rashidi Yekini. I had wanted them to provide protection to guard his
house (in Ibadan) so that they will be able to preserve any evidence
gathered at the house to help further investigation into his death. But
the reply I got from the police was that I should arrange for private
guards myself as the police cannot do me such a favour.
"I
was disappointed after this because I had narrowed down the reason for
protection on his property. I learnt on two occasions after Yekini was
taken away that his brother and sister came to the house and took away
some things. So I didn't want the investigation jeopardised with people
going in and out of the house and destroying possible evidence.
"The
police didn't do anything except that I was told that his death was
circumstantial with no conclusive evidence. I remember that the former
(Oyo State) police commissioner had to intervene on three occasions when
they tried to abduct him on the grounds that he was mentally ill
without a doctor's report to back their claim. He gave an order that no
one should try to move near Rashidi Yekini or take him away without the
consent of the Nigeria Police.
Yekini's
daughter, Omoyemi, who was also a guest on the radio show, cleared the
air on the purported mental state of her late father.
"I
wasn't surprised (about claims that my dad was mentally unstable)," she
said. "This is because people felt living alone was an evidence of his
mental state. My mum tried to know why he wanted to stay alone but he
insisted. I spent most of my holidays with him and whenever I was due to
return to school in Osogbo he would buy all of my school materials and
also give me my tuition fee."
Olanrewaju
then lifted the lid on the fact that when the herbal treatment given to
Yekini went awry leading to his death, the former Nigerian striker was
rushed to a clinic in Apete, where the doctor pronounced him dead.
"He was rushed to a clinic in Apete. A note from the doctor said he died of a cardio issue I can't now recall," said the lawyer.
The
lawyer also claimed that Yekini had fallen out with his mother over an
estranged child brought into the family by another woman who he denied
having anything to do with.
A book titled 'Rashidi Yekini' on the late footballer's life is expected to be unveiled in Ibadan in May this year.
Yekini died in Ibadan on May 4, 2012 at the age of 48.
Supersport.com
will publish an interview with Yekini's mother as a follow-up to this
latest development surrounding the death of the Nigerian legend.
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