Fast
rising Nigerian singer, Margaret Mary Oluwatoyin Ejiro Joseph, popularly known
as Zara Gretti passed away on March 28, 2014 at the age of 28, after losing her
battle with Multiple Sclerosis. The controversy about how she was abandoned by
several of her colleagues in the music industry is no longer news. The way a
lot of music celebrities all took to social media to famz, eulogize and send
condolence messages after she passed on when most of them never lifted a finger
to help keep her alive is unsavory enough on its own. But, amebo can reveal
exclusively that there’s a development that’s even much more disturbing than
the way she was abandoned before she passed on. In preparation for the one year
anniversary of her death, NET paid a visit to the Ikoyi Cemetery, Lagos where
Zara was buried on Thursday, March 19, 2015, and the following shocking
discoveries were made: Cemetery register confirms Zara’s burial: This reporter
visited Ikoyi Cemetery office, Lagos. After getting the details of the actual
place her remains were interred, an extensive search of the cemetery records
and register revealed that Zara Gretti was indeed, buried at the Ikoyi Cemetery
on Friday, April 4, 2014. According to the register, her grave was in Section
five of the cemetery. Curiosity was fully pricked though, when the attendant,
identified as the secretary of the facility who attended to this reporter asked
absent-mindedly: ‘Do you know if this was the third or fourth time that
particular grave was used?’ The quick response was that I was not around when
she was brought for burial; hence there was no way I could know about that.
Official could not locate her tomb: After the register had confirmed that she
was indeed buried at the cemetery, we proceeded to the grounds. On getting to
the area identified as Section Five by the official, it was shocking to find
out that Zara’s tomb could not be found. 2-hour search proved abortive: Upon
insisting on seeing the tomb, we continued to search, but the time spent proved
fruitless. We can reveal exclusively that Zara Gretti’s grave is missing.
Referring to his question on how many times the tomb had been used. The
official was quick to deny that any such thing ever happens at all. ‘We don’t
ever use a grave for another corpse once someone has been buried there,’ he
said, forgetting that he had said something quite contrary earlier. The
official took this reporter’s phone number, promising to call him when he
eventually locates the grave. He is yet to do so as at press time. This
development raises some disturbing questions. Do cemetery officials actually
exhume bodies of buried people at the cemeteries without duly informing the
deceased’s family or getting their approval? What has become of Zara’s grave at
Ikoyi Cemetery just one year after she was buried there?...
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