The story has been told of one of Davido’s friends who died last week but who
is not being talked about like DJ Olu and Tagbo.
I was in a
meeting upstairs when our TV producer, Joan Omionawele called me on the phone.
Strange, because she knew I was engaged at the moment. I didn’t pick up. She
called twice again and I was immediately suspicious. What’s going on in the
newsroom?
I didn’t have to
wonder for long: she came to the office where I was meeting and crashed it.
‘Sorry Jide, but there’s something really important you need to know.’ I
excused myself from the meeting and walked with her. Then she told me Chime
Amaechi‘s family members were here. Chime who? ‘Chime now. The other guy that
died with Davido’s DJ in Banana Island.’ ‘Oh shoot!’ I said. That’s important.
Here’s why it was
important: even I had wondered who Chime was. It seemed like his death,
compared to Tagbo‘s – which Caroline Danjuma made a big fuss about – and DJ
Olu’s – who got a lot of media coverage probably because of his billionaire
father – did not interest anybody. Apart from the Punch report earlier in the
day that claimed ‘hard drugs’ were recovered from the death scene, not much was
being said about the ‘third Davido associate’.
As we went
upstairs to the lounge where they were waiting, I could hear a man’s voice
saying ‘No no, nothing like that. I’m surprised myself. My son was not a drug
user.’ We got in and I saw a family huddled together in silence: father folded
his arms across his chest, the sisters glancing at their phones and shaking
their heads intermittently. The scene looked like gloomy French pantomime.
‘Good afternoon
sir…’ I began tentatively. How does one comfort a parent whose child had just
died? Plus I’m not their friend or a family member: I’m a newsman who wants to
get the story from them; how does one do that without coming across as
insincere? They responded quite well and I told them what we wanted from them:
just to share their story. Is that fine with you? Father said yes and stood up.
Let’s go he said, as we all made our way back to the studio.
Who was Chime?
Up on till this
moment, the most that had been said about the Chime was that ‘he died with DJ
Olu’, as though he was inconsequential. And that’s how it sometimes happens,
when a less popular individual dies in company of famous people. When Princess
Diana died, the whole world stood still. Even her boyfriend Dodi El-Fayed was
less talked about than she – and the third casualty of the night, Henri Paul,
is rarely mentioned, as though he was a postscript to the tragedy.
In the same vein,
Chime Amaechi got lost in the ‘Davido’s friend’ chatter. But who was he, how
did he get involved in this macabre story?
‘He was a good
son’, his father began. ‘He wasn’t a riffraff that was hanging around Davido
looking for handouts…no, no. He and Olu Abiodun were childhood friends in
Ibadan.
‘They met in
primary school. They attended Oritamefa Baptist School. If you know that
school, you’ll agree with me that it wasn’t an ‘anyhow’ school. It’s a private
school with modern facilities and that’s where he and Olu met. He used to play
drums, very talented. He used to play drums in the choir and that’s where his
love for music started. It was where the two of them first became friends…’
Mr. Amaechi is a
real estate surveyor and valuer in Ibadan, possibly the second thriving
metropolis in south-west Nigeria, after Lagos. He may have earned a decent
living enough to send his children to quality schools, but he was no Dapo
Abiodun – billionaire oil magnate and politician – nor for that matter, Adedeji
Adeleke.
Soon as it often
happens with childhood friends, life does what it does: Olu was sent off to the
UK to continue his studies while Chime remained in Ibadan. In time, he got
admitted to the University of Lagos and attempted to get a university degree.
It wasn’t to be.
He and Olu would
later reunite on social media and rekindle their friendship. By this time Olu
had met Davido and was getting involved in the music as official DJ. On one of
his trips back home, he and Chime decided to do business: Olu was an oil firm
heir and had access to small, but very profitable ventures. ‘Olu’s father owns
Heyden Petroleum and he with Chime used to transport petroleum products, in
thousands of litres, across the whole country,’ Chime’s sister Sopulu said.
‘They also had real estate that they were marketing and getting commissions
from. Even last week, he still sent me pictures of a parcel of land to market
in Ibadan,’ her father added.
Soon Chime
started seeing more than his dear father and dropped out of school all
together. ‘When I advised him as a father to go back to school, he told me that
people that graduated are not making the type of money he was so what’s the
point?’
And really what
was the point of slaving away in class? The elderly man may not get it but
Chime was living every young man’s dream: he shared a flat with Olu in Banana
Island, money was flowing in steadily and his celebrity connection was on
point. To put it into perspective: he was only 23 years old on his last
birthday in February. He’s been living the good life since he was 19. School
for what?
‘We were at home in
Ibadan, when a family friend who does not normally call came to the house with
his wife. They said Chime was in an accident and we should pack our bags and
come with them to Lagos. It was very strange to me and I wondered what was
going on,’ Mr. Amaechi said.
It was early on
Sunday morning and they were getting ready to go to church. About that time,
some friends had seen reports of it online and had called his sister. ‘I
noticed someone else who I don’t talk to often called and when I picked all he
was saying was ‘Oh my God, oh my God’.’
It didn’t take
much longer to realize that Chime was dead. The family made their way to the
morgue and Lagos State University Teaching Hospital in Ikeja.
His father went
in there and looked at the body. ‘I went inside. He’s my son. I went to look at
him. He was still bleeding fresh blood from his nose and foaming at the mouth.
It looked as if it just happened.’
No parent should
have to recall looking at their child’s corpse. As Chime’s father spoke, he
masked his pain bravely; a trait that his daughter, Sopulu, must have also
picked up. Neither of them shed into tears as they spoke to us, their voices
only trailing off for a few seconds at intervals. The rest of the family sobbed
quietly in the corner, trying to be strong in public but failing at it.
However, the
family is convinced that this was no ordinary death, or an overdose as reported
in the media. Sopulu in particular is insistent that they were murdered.
‘First, nobody is
talking about the fact that they went to eat somewhere before heading home.
Someone put the video on his Snapchat and was zooming in and out of his food.
That was unlike Chime. He was usually not one to show the surroundings of where
he was at any given time. But on this occasion someone was recording him. Few
minutes later the video was deleted, it wasn’t left there for the normal 24
hours.’
Could he have
overdosed on drugs, like initial reports had it? They disagreed vehemently. ‘My
son was not a drug user,’ his father said. ‘He doesn’t even drink and if he
did, it was just a little. He was the one always telling his friends not to
drink or smoke. For anyone to claim that he overdosed on drugs is malicious.’
It had been
reported in the media, based on a Punch coverage, that police found ‘hard drugs’
in the BMW where Olu and Chime had died. ‘Then they should tell us what hard
drugs they found. The drugs would have a name. Besides, can two persons
overdose at the same time on the same thing and die exactly the same way? It
doesn’t add up.’
Again, one would
not expect that grieving parents would agree that it was a possibility that
their child used drugs. After all, he was young and considerably successful. As
we’ve seen in successful people all across the world, drugs didn’t have to be
big deal that they couldn’t get if they wanted. Like Lamar Odom said about his
wife, Khloe Kardashian, not knowing of his drug addiction when they were
married, ‘I had money in my pocket; I could score when I wanted.’ Perhaps an
autopsy would give them closure – Chime’s death could have been as a result of
an overdose.
His father and
sister would have none of that. Sopulu is of the opinion that whoever killed
her brother was responsible for the dirt being thrown on his name posthumously.
‘They should show us the footage from their house. Someone who saw it said when
Olu and Chime parked, a hooded figure came to drop something in their car. That
person is unknown.’
Her father thinks
so too. ‘Already I’m skeptical of the autopsy. These substances could have been
introduced to them later, given this strange individual that was said to drop
something in the car. If the autopsy comes back and they say there was drugs in
his system, I would be shocked but I won’t be surprised. I’m very skeptical.’
But we were not
satisfied. The report the family gave of Chime was of a nice, easygoing, gentle
soul. Why would anyone then want to murder him? Could it be blow-back from the
unresolved Tagbo death few days earlier which Davido had been accused of being
complicit in? Were Olu and Chime killed to prevent them from talking about
Tagbo’s death?
The Davido
Connection
Chime’s family
disagrees. They don’t think the singer was involved at all. They think it’s one
of the unfair media coverage they’ve received. His father told us that the
friends had been distancing themselves from music to focus on ‘real business’.
‘If you look
well, you’ll see that Olu was referred to as ‘former DJ to Davido.’ Olu’s
father was already positioning him for real, big time business. Chime had
little to do with the music anyway. He was just part of the bigger group as
Olu’s friend. It’s not correct to include Davido in this matter.’
‘Besides,’ his
daughter interjects, ‘Chime and Olu were not even around when Tagbo died. They
were in Ibadan. That Monday they came to conclude a deal they were doing with
the Oyo State government so that had nothing to do with them. I feel this was
related to their business, not Davido. Somebody wanted to take out Olu and
Chime was just unfortunate to be his guardian angel. He died because he was
always close to his friend.’
‘We just want
justice to be done,’ her father continued. ‘As a Christian, I had accepted my
fate but when I saw the reports in the media; not even the blogs this time, but
Punch- I had to speak out. My son was never, never a drug user.’
As the interview
wrapped up, father and child stood up, blinking at the studio light. We thanked
them for sharing their story with us. They thanked us for having them. Mr.
Amaechi shook hands with me and once again, I expressed my condolences. ‘It’s
okay,’ he said resignedly, ‘it’s okay…’
But it’s not.
They may never
find the answers, or if they do, they may never accept the answers. The death
of a child is never an easy thing to swallow and most parents never recover
from the shock, the grief, the guilt. As they believe that Chime was Olu’s
‘guardian angel’, the questions will always tug at their minds: what if they
had never met? What if their friendship had ended when Olu left for Middlesex
University? What if Chime had stayed in school himself? A thousand and one
‘what-ifs’ and they may never find an answer.
Source: news2.onlinenigeria
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