Culled from SUN NEWS;
"Narrating his ordeal to Saturday Sun, Nwabude, a former lorry driver,
 said robbers plucked his eyes, as punishment for daring to run over 
their barricade and thereby frustrating their operations. According to 
him, the day the incident happened, in 1992, he was travelling from Jos,
 in Plateau State, to Onitsha, in Anambra State, with goods and 
passengers in his Mercedes Benz lorry when they ran into a roadblock 
mounted by armed robbers, in the night, at Opi Junction, in Nsukka area 
of Enugu State."
How men can inflict such pain and destruction on a fellow human being is beyond me. Continue to read this very sad story after the cut...
That encounter rendered him blind and has incapacitated his life.  On
 what happened, he said: “At Opi Junction, we ran into a gang of armed 
robbers, who mounted road block on the way and I had no alternative but 
to stop because the road block was high and I could not run over it. 
They opened fire on us and killed four of my passengers, who were owners
 of the tomatoes I was carrying in the vehicle and inflicted injury on 
some others.
“The rest of us who were alive and conscious, jumped down from the 
vehicle and were ordered to lie face down on the road and we did.”  
Nwabude said that when the robbers discovered that he was the driver of 
the vehicle, they told him that they would deal with him because he had 
earlier run over their road block in one of their operations at Ankpa, 
in Benue State and thereby frustrating their operations.
“When they said that, I concluded that they would either kill me 
outright or shoot me on the leg or somewhere else to give me permanent 
disability,” he stated.  According to the driver, the robbers tied his 
hands and legs with the rope they got from his vehicle, and used their 
sharp knife to pluck his two eyes and left him to his fate.  Nwabude 
said that other drivers came to his rescue when the robbers had gone and
 took him to the University of Nigeria Teaching Hospital, Enugu.
Since he was discharged from the hospital, he has been going to UNTH 
on monthly basis for check-up, where doctors wash the artificial eyes 
they fixed in his eye socket as well as give him drugs to reduce pain 
and forestall infection. Nwabude’s tale continues after the robbery, 
when his wife, who got traumatised by what happened, developed 
hypertension and died. 
He said: “My wife developed hypertension and was 
taken to the hospital. The next information I received was that my wife 
was dead. Her death compounded my problems, as I was left with our four 
children to cater for, when I am blind and did not have any means of 
livelihood.”  Nwabude said that a priest later assisted him by getting 
families who took in two of his four children. Unfortunately, one of the
 two kids died in Lagos, while the other one is still living with the 
family. 
The blind man said he was once given a paper to the Ministry of 
Women Affairs to seek employment, but regretted that after several 
visits, nothing positive came out of it.
“Although I appreciate so much the assistance being given to me and 
my children by good spirited people, I want the government to help me in
 any way, so that I will be able to feed my children and give them good 
education,” he declared.

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