One
cold afternoon, 11-year-old Bisi Adebola (not real name) was running
errands for her mother in Ipaja area of Lagos, when a paedophile living
just few metres away from their house, called the girl into his house
and raped her.
Shy and afraid, Bisi told Saturday PUNCH,
on the prompting of her mother, how the man, whom she referred to as
‘Alfa’, called her under the pretence that he wanted to send something
to her mother.
The girl said, “He told me to follow him
into his room and when I got inside and waited to collect what he said
he wanted to give me, he locked the door and told me to sit down.
“I
told him I would stand but he dragged me down on his lap and started to
rub my breasts. When I struggled to run away from his grip, he pinned
me down with his legs and pulled down my pant.
He put his…(she could not
say the word) inside me. When he finished, I could not stand. Blood was
coming out from my body but he helped me to clean it up. That was why I
was late to where my mother sent me to.”
Bisi’s mother only suspected that
something had happened to her daughter when the girl could not explain
why she was one hour late from the errand she sent her.
Not knowing what her daughter had
experienced, Bisi’s mother began to beat her. The girl then cried out
and gave an account of what ‘Alfa’ had done to her. The mother promptly
reported the case at the Ipaja Police Station.
Alfa was arrested and one week after, he
was released on bail. Bisi’s mother called our correspondent, “They have
released the man. I asked them what they would do about the case but it
is like they are not going to do anything. Imagine, a policewoman
telling my daughter ‘You are a bad girl. You must have been enjoying it
too.’ I felt like slapping the woman.”
Alfa was never prosecuted.
Bisi’s case attests to a systemic failure
that has continued to give the crime a breeding ground. At the centre
of this failure are the men and women of the Nigeria Police, whose
attitude, actions and inactions have aided paedophiles to escape
justice.
Unlike Bisi’s parents, many families of victims don’t even bother pressing charges.
Writer and columnist, Kaine Agary, says
victims of sexual offences are often reluctant to press charges against
offenders because the process of getting justice can be further
traumatising. Most times, the cases die on arrival at the police
stations where they are reported.
“The police are greatly hampered by lack
of training and poor logistics for quick response. Most of them do not
know what to do and how to handle cases of sexual violence. Policing and
responding to sexual crimes require a high level of sensitivity and
specialised skills in investigating and prosecuting. This,
unfortunately, is lacking in the Nigeria Police,” Dr. Josephine
Effa-Chukwuma, Executive Director, Project Alert, said.
The most heinous of sexual crimes
sometimes end up unprosecuted because sometimes the only witness to the
crime is too young or too afraid to explain what has happened and based
on this, the police dismiss such cases.
This is similar to the case of Nofisat
Balogun, a nine-year-old girl who was raped by a graduate of the
University of Lagos, one Ikechukwu Obasi, in Pako Aguda area of
Surulere, Lagos.
“I have never thought that the man could
do that to my daughter. He was such a friendly person in our compound,”
the victim’s mother, Bilikis, told our correspondent.
Nofisat a quiet and shy girl, whose eyes
showed the painful memory of the experience she had gone through, told
our correspondent that she did not suspect anything when Obasi came into
the room where she was reading in their apartment and gave her a N1,000
note to go and buy food for him.
“I bought the food and took it to him.
When I went back to give him his change, he locked the door. He then
used a cloth to cover my mouth and I could not shout. He then carried me
to the bed and did ‘it.’ When he finished and I was bleeding, he said I
should not tell anybody,” Nofisat said.
The case was later reported at the Aguda
Police Division, Surulere, but the police said they had been unable to
take any action because the culprit had fled.
But Obasi’s family approached Nofisat’s
family, pleading to pay monetary compensation to settle the matter. To
her amazement, one of the policemen investigating the case blamed
Bilikis for not collecting the money they offered her.
“The policewoman in charge of the case
said I should just collect the money they offered me and stop making
noise. How can they tell me they want to pay N40,000 so that I would
forget my daughter was raped? All I want is justice for my daughter.
They have refused to produce the man,” Balogun’s mother said.
After a few days in police custody, Obasi was never arrested till date, Saturday PUNCH learnt.
Like Balogun’s mother,
thirty-six-year-old Sola Adebisi also had a bitter story to tell about
police handling of the rape of her eight-year-old daughter, Lola (not
real name), by a security guard in Ikorodu area of Lagos in January
2015.
In fact, Adebisi said the police at the
Ikorodu Police Division turned the case on her in such a way that she
felt as if her daughter was the culprit in the offence.
“One of the policemen even said to my
face ‘Like daughter, like mother.’ Are they implying my daughter
deserved to be sexually assaulted?” she said.
According to the single mother of two,
who sells food at bus stop in Ikorodu, she sent her daughter on errand
around 7.30pm at the close of work that day when she realised she took
longer than usual.
“I went to look for her at the house
later and Mr. Benjamin (the security guard, popularly called Baba Ijebu
in the area) told me that she had left a while ago. I saw the containers
there.”
Adebisi
said it was when she turned to leave that she noticed her daughter
coming out of a corner of the house. The mother demanded to know where
her daughter had been but the girl could not give a satisfactory answer.
“I kept asking her and all she could tell
me was that she did not get back on time because Baba Ijebu refused to
open the gate on time. I knew she was lying and even threatened to beat
her up,” she said.
The girl later told her mother about two
instances of sexual assaults by the same man, who had warned her against
telling her mother what he did.
“She told me that Baba Ijebu dragged her
into a corner of the house and dipped his fingers in her private part.
She said that day was the second time such thing would happen.”
The mother later reported the case at the
Ikorodu Police Division, where policemen were drafted to arrest
Benjamin but that the case was drawn out under different excuses by the
police till they finally released Benjamin.
“Now, when Benjamin sees my daughter, he
winks and laughs at her. She always tells me when that happens. The
police have told me to forget about the issue and settle with the man.
When I remained adamant, they started abusing me, blaming me for what
happened. One of the policemen in charge of the case even blamed me for
letting him (Benjamin) waste money he should have paid me as settlement
on getting a lawyer,” Adebisi told our correspondent at the time.
The police only rearrested Benjamin after a report by Saturday PUNCH.
These and many other cases indict men of
the Nigeria Police and give a sense of lacking understanding of the
enormity of sexual offences.
For as long as she could remember,
eight-year-old Comfort had heard their long time tenant, 45-year-old
Victor Aneke, call her different pet names.
“Sometimes, he called me ‘Baby’ but most of the time, he called me ‘my wife,’” the girl said.
Her father had travelled back to their
village in Eastern Nigeria to oversee their investment back home,
leaving the mother and the other children to themselves in a six-room
apartment block popularly called ‘Face-Me-I-Face-You’ in Lagos.
Aneke had been living in the building as a
tenant since 1999, long before Comfort was born. The girl grew up
playing with their tenant’s children and most of the time, she watched
movies in his sitting room just next door to their own.
But in April 2015, just few weeks after
Comfort’s eighth year birthday, her mother observed as they came home
from church that her daughter was walking with her legs apart. Her
mother, Mrs. Grace Adebiyi, was not satisfied when she tried to find out
what had happened to her daughter and the girl quickly told her she was
fine.
By night, as the neighbourhood quietened
to a deep slumber, she stood up from her bed and went to where her
daughter slept. Adebiyi checked between her daughter’s legs and
confirmed her greatest fear. Comfort’s private part had been badly
bruised.
When Adebiyi volunteered to share her
story later, Comfort had been taken to the hospital for a check. Doctors
confirmed she had multiple lacerations consistent with sexual assault.
After a lot of pressure and threats from her mother, Comfort finally opened up. She fingered Aneke as the culprit.
But despite Aneke’s blatant denials,
Comfort gave a detailed account of a sexual abuse that first began with
Aneke touching her private part with his fingers.
“This is the first time he would put his
‘thing’ inside me. He always used his finger and would warn me never to
tell my mother. It was very painful. I begged him to stop. I told him
‘Uncle, please stop, it is hurting me’ but he told me to endure it. I
could not breathe. He covered my mouth with his hand when I wanted to
shout because the pain was too much. I thought I was going to die,”
Comfort explained.
Aneke
was released from custody without being charged to court. When the
police were asked why Aneke was roaming free, he was said to have been
released “on medical grounds.” But when our correspondent interviewed
him in his home, he was hale and hearty.
He was later rearrested by policemen from the Ipaja division and charged to court after a Saturday PUNCH report.
Stories such as Comfort’s have become all too common in a country where a large percentage of sex offenders go unpunished.
Unfortunately, many states in the country
do not have accurate or estimate data on the number of reported rape
cases, which makes it difficult to fully quantify the number of sexual
assault cases all over the country. But if one is to go by data
available in Lagos State, there is no doubt that the incidence of rape
is on a steady rise.
According to the Lagos State
Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice, Ade Ipaye, at least
12,120 rape cases were reported in the last four years. In the last one
year alone, 140 sex offenders have been convicted in the state.
To show the alarming increase in sexual
offences, the Lagos State Police Command said in 2013 that within one
year, 678 cases of rape were recorded in Lagos. In 2015, the Office of
the Public Defender, an agency under the Lagos State Ministry of
Justice, said it handled 526 rape cases, apart from scores of others
handled by the police but not directed to the OPD.
But experts say these statistics do not
show the magnitude of child sexual abuses in the country as many of the
offenders go unpunished even when their cases are reported to the
police.
If one thinks that the rape of a child as
young as four years old is heinous, then the case of 16-month-old
Victoria will only stir utter incredulity in one’s heart.
Few weeks ago, Victoria (not real name)
was raped at a daycare in Ikotun area of Lagos where her mother usually
dropped her off before going to work.
By the time she went back for Victoria
and brought her back home and tried to bathe for her, she knew something
terrible had been done to her daughter.
The angry mother said, “I had never
imagined that something like this could happen. How can someone abuse my
baby? She is not even one and half years old yet!
“I was bathing for her when I noticed
that when water splashed on her, she flinched. I tried to examine
whether any part of her body was injured at school and noticed that her
private part was bleeding.
“I had to immediately call my husband to explain what I noticed and we reported to the police.”
Victoria’s parents told Saturday PUNCH
that they had been instructed to take her to the Mirabel Centre at the
Lagos State University Teaching Hospital for tests and treatment.
Mirabel is Nigeria’s first sexual assault referral centre.
Police investigation on the case is still
ongoing. As of the time of filing this report, the result of the series
of tests conducted on Victoria was not yet out.
These cases simply point to how serious the issue of child sexual abuses have become in the country.
According to Partners for Justice,
statistics shows that 80 per cent of sexual assaults victims in Nigeria
are children between the ages of 11 and 15.
Nigeria’s anti-rape stance comes to the
fore with a renewed focus as the country’s 8th National Assembly takes
over the responsibility of making laws for the country. The 7th Assembly
had hurriedly, among 45 other bills, passed the Sexual Offences Bill,
2013, sponsored by Senator Chris Anyanwu, just before the end of its
tenure.
But Nobel Laureate Prof. Wole Soyinka,
and human rights lawyer, Mr. Femi Falana, have staunchly opposed the new
law, saying it is detrimental to the cause of eradicating rape.
The
contentious section 7 of the passed bill, which defines child
defilement as an act which causes penetration with a child, reads “(2)A
person who commits an offence of defilement with a child aged eleven
years or less shall upon conviction be sentenced to imprisonment for
life. (3) A person who commits an offence of defilement with a child
between the age of 12 and 15 years is liable upon conviction to
imprisonment for life. (4) A person who commits an offence of defilement
with a child between the ages of 16 and 18 is liable upon conviction to
imprisonment for life.”
Section 4 of the bill makes an earlier
clarification about sexual assaults. It says, “(1) Any person who
unlawfully penetrates the genital organs of a person with any part of
the body of another or that person; or an object manipulated by another
or that person except where such penetration is carried out for proper
and professional hygienic or medical purposes; (1b)… is guilty of an
offence termed sexual assault and liable upon conviction to imprisonment
for a term of not less than 10 years but which may be enhanced to
imprisonment for life.”
Reacting to controversies which the bill
has generated, Anyanwu explained that the situation had become so worse
that an urgent intervention was needed.
She said, “Where we are now, the status
quo, is a world in which a six-year-old child is raped to death and then
set ablaze. Where we are now is a place where a father rapes his
three-year old girl repeatedly and the mother weeps at night and cannot
speak out of shame and fear of her life.”
The passed anti-rape law, which has yet
to be assented to by the President, came about in the first place as a
result of the worrisome high incidence of rape, especially of children,
in the country.
The United Nations Children’s Fund said much of these sexual crimes are taking place in schools.
In a 2007 study in the northern and
southern Nigeria, UNICEF revealed that 11 per cent of the female
children in schools investigated have heard of rapes taking place in
their schools.
“The high percentage of awareness of rape
cases among female learners might be related to the fact that female
learners are mostly victims of violence (especially sexual violence) in
schools. The culture of silence prevalent in most Nigerian societies did
not help matters as issues such as rape were most often concealed by
victims,” UNICEF said.
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