What is left of 25-year-old Mohammed Liman is a shadow of the vibrant young man he once was. Now confined to a wheelchair, his days are consumed by pain, despair, and unanswered questions about the tragedy that destroyed his family.
On August 1, 2024, Mohammed and his three brothers were having breakfast at Kime Filling Station along Baga Road, Maiduguri, when a grenade explosion tore through their lives. His three brothers were killed instantly. Mohammed survived, but with life-altering injuries that have left him paralyzed.
While his family insists that security operatives threw the grenade, police authorities swiftly denied responsibility, blaming Boko Haram insurgents for infiltrating the nationwide #EndBadGovernance protest and causing the blast.
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The conflicting accounts have left the grieving family trapped between two devastating realities: the death of three sons and the paralysis of the only survivor—without justice or closure.
Instead of receiving protection and care, Mohammed’s ordeal deepened when the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital discharged him after eight months of treatment, despite his inability to walk. Sources told SaharaReporters that the hospital’s action was linked to a dispute between security agencies and the hospital management over his medical records.
Though his treatment was initially funded by an international NGO, that support has ended, leaving his family to shoulder his care. Now dependent on others for nearly everything, Mohammed admits the burden of survival often feels unbearable.
“I’m tired of this life,” he said quietly. “I wish I had died like my three brothers that day.”
His mother, worn down by grief and responsibility, appealed for help. “All we need now is support, and I’m appealing to anyone,” she said.
For the Liman family, the scars of that August morning remain raw—deepened by official denials, the absence of accountability, and the abandonment of a young man whose future was stolen by an explosion no one has yet owned up to.