Tag: rape

  • School guard in dock for ‘raping’ teenage pupil

    For allegedly raping a 17-year old pupil at a school library, a security man has been arraigned before a Lagos Magistrates’Court.

    Emeka Nwabunwane, 30, was said to have forced the girl (names withheld) to have carnal knowledge of her on July 13.

    He allegedly lured the teenager to the library under the pretence of giving her a Biology text book.

    Nwabunwane after luring the girl into the library, allegedly attempted to strangle her when she refused to pull her clothe.

    He was said to have threatened to stab the victim if she refuses to cooperate and had struggled with the girl such that she was weak and defenceless before defiling her.

    According to the prosecutor, Corporal Adeleye Oluwafemi, the offence contravened Section 258(2) of the Criminal Laws of Lagos, 2011.

    The defendant, who pleaded not guilty to the charge, claimed that the victim was his girlfriend.

    Presiding Magistrate P.E. Nwaka admitted him to bail in N150, 000 with three sureties in like sum who must deposit N50, 000 each at the Chief Registrar’s account.

    He ordered that the case file be transfered to the Director of Public Prosecution, DPP, and adjourned the matter for DPP.

     

  • Farmer kills man for raping his wife

    A farmer in Isheyin Local Government Area of Oyo State has shot dead a herdsman for allegedly raping his (farmer) wife on his farm at Sawo Village, near Oyo.

    Spokesperson of the state Police Command, DSP Olabisi Ilobanofor, confirmed the incident on Thursday in a telephone interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN).

    She said that the incident occurred on Aug. 24

    According to her, the Divisional Police Headquarters in Iseyin, led by the DPO, rushed to the scene to forestall breakdown of law and order in the area.

    “Information available to the command is that the farmer and his wife were working in separate portions of their farm when his wife shouted for help.

    “When he got there, he met the herdsman raping his wife and shot him from close range with a locally made gun,” she said.

    Ilobanofor said that the suspect and his wife had been detained at the state Criminal Investigation Department (CID) Iyaganku, Ibadan.

    She said that the duo would be charged to court as soon investigation was concluded.

    While urging residents of the area to remain calm, the PPRO assured that the police would conduct thorough investigation into the matter. (NAN)

  • Man docked for attempting to rape nursing mother

    A 29-year-old man, Stanley Bestman, on Wednesday appeared before an Abuja Magistrates’ Court for allegedly attempting to rape a woman, Naomi Haruna, on her farm.

    The accused, who is of no fixed address, was charged for criminal assault and criminal force with intent to rape Haruna at Daki-Biyu village, Jabi, Abuja on Aug. 30.

    The police prosecutor, Cpl. Simon Emmanuel, alleged that Haruna was working on her farm with a baby strapped on her back when the accused suddenly emerged from the bush.

    He said that the accused then grabbed her and pushed her to the ground and forced his finger into her private part with the intention to rape her.

    Emmanuel further alleged that the accused ran way when the victim raised an alarm which attracted the attention of people who came to the scene of the alleged crime.

    The prosecutor said the accused was subsequently trailed and apprehended by neighbouring farmers who took him to the Life Camp Police Station.

    The accused, however, pleaded not guilty when Magistrate Idaiyat Akanni took his plea.

    Akanni admitted the accused to bail in the sum of N100,000 with two reliable sureties.

    She ordered that the sureties must be resident within the court’s jurisdiction and one of them must be a civil servant not below Grade Level 7.

    The Magistrate adjourned the case to Sept. 20 for hearing. (NAN)

  • Ebonyi council boss held for ‘rape’ of mum, two daughters

    The police in Ebonyi State yesterday arrested the Vice-Chairman of Ikwo Local Government Area, Sunday Ottah, for alleged complicity in the rape of a woman councillor-aspirant and her two daughters.

    The suspect was brought into the State Police Headquarters, Abakaliki, and detained at 2.09 pm.

    The rape of Mrs. Margaret Elom, a widow, who won the councillorship primaries of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Ndiagu Achara Ward 1 in Ikwo community, was alleged to have been perpetrated by hoodlums hired by Ottah.

    The hoodlums stole N50, 000 and a motorcycle from them.

    Police spokesman Sylvester Igbo confirmed the incident, saying the matter would be investigated.

    He said one of the suspects confirmed that Ottah was behind the act, an allegation he said Ottah had denied.

    Igbo said: “Mrs. Margaret Elom, the councillor-aspirant for Ndiagu Echara Ward I in Ikwo Local Government Area reported that some hoodlums broke into her house and stole N50,000 and a motorcycle valued at N120,000 and nine phones.

    “She said two of her daughters were raped by the two suspects, who were later identified as Chidi Eze (24) and Sunday Nwogu (23). Eze was arraigned on August 12.

    “The suspects confessed to the crime and added that they were sent to the woman’s house to retrieve the motorcycle that was given to her for campaign and the Certificate of Return given to her by the State Independent Electoral Commission (EBSIEC).”

    Though the police didn’t confirm if Mrs. Elom was raped, sources confirmed that she was raped with her daughters.

    But Ottah, who spoke from behind the police counter, said he was innocent.

     

     

  • ‘My  wife’s rapists nearly lynched me with machetes’

    ‘My wife’s rapists nearly lynched me with machetes’

    What has been the reaction of the government to your plight since the last publication?

    Government is government; they know what to do. In a matter like this, I cannot tell them what to do, but one thing I know is that God is watching and members of the public, both locally and internationally, are watching. The humiliation, as I said before, was not done to me but the entire human race and women at large.

    One of the suspects at large called me on phone; he confessed and condemned what they did and apologised to me. But, all I could answer him was to stop confessing and apologising to me, rather he should do all of those to God. My wife is God’s creation and not mine. So, he should repent and surrender his life to God; so, he will not enmesh himself into such act again.

    Let me also use this opportunity to inform the government that by my experience on pregnancy and HIV/AIDS, and the campaign against transmission to unborn babies, I have some wise solution to it and will like to make myself available to them if I am called upon to proffer wise and workable procedures to preventing the transition from mother to child.

    What is your feeling on the way the government and the judiciary are handling the case?

    I have not heard anything about the matter since. Who am I in the society that my outcry should be taken seriously? Who do I have that will stand to ensure the matter is taken up? My fervent prayer is that the suspects (rapists) should repent from what they did. If they repent, the government should forgive them.

    Do you really mean that?

    Yes, if they repent, they should be forgiven.

    So, why are you concerned that nothing has been done about the matter?

    I was in Magistrate’s Court Nine, here in Port Harcourt the first time they were arraigned, and the case file was referred to the DPP. Since then, I have not heard any other thing about it.

    I want to tell the whole world that God is the ultimate in whatever we do on earth today and should not be ignored. Let us fear God; that is the beginning of wisdom.

    What is the reaction of your kinsmen, your community leaders and family members and is it true that you were banished?

    Nobody banished me. Indigenes of my community, the young, the old and the chiefs, were and are solidly behind me up till date. They totally condemned the act. Some of them described it as abomination while others said it was an act of gross wickedness, which bears grave consequences on the actors and the community, being members of my family and community.

    Knowing the consequences, our chiefs attempted to wade into the matter but unfortunately it was already with the police; so, I asked them to go to the police and discuss with them. It is no longer my matter.

    Every member of the community has been raining abuses on the criminals; I was not banished at all. They have continued to pray that God should visit and pay those people back in His own way. I believe they have begun to reap it. What is happening in that community now proves to me that they are on top of it.

    The only thing is that because of the continued threat to my life by the suspects and their cohorts, elders of my community advised me not to frequent the village as I used to, or if I must come, I should come in the company of security personnel.

    The last time I went there, they came after me with machetes, clubs and other weapons to attack me, if not for the community members that intervened and rescued me; I don’t know what would have become of me now.

    They were angry that I went to the press. They were asking me the reason I took the matter to the media, saying that I have disgraced them. My problem now is that I can’t go home as I wish to see my aged mother of over 70 years because of fear of their attacks. I was not actually banished.

    Why did your wife go back to her parents and how did she get to the police with the information about her rape?

    After I reported the matter to the police and made statement, police from the Rivers State Criminal Investigation Department (SCID) traced my wife to her parents’ residence at Owerri and arrested her.

    After the discovery that she and our about five month’s old baby boy were positive to the deadly disease, the parents invited her over to be with them for a while. It was there the police went to arrest her, brought her to their office in Port Harcourt, took her statement. It was in her statement that she mentioned the names of the people that raped her. Unfortunately, some of them are my cousins of the same surname. Before she was arrested, the boy had died.

    It was at this point that the police, led by a very senior officer, a Superintendent of Police (SP), Eneje, with the support of the DC/SCID ,Mr. Sam, led the investigations. As I said earlier, my wife was about two months pregnant when the incident happened.

    I am very grateful to God for the SP and his team; how they followed up the matter is worthy of emulation. The SP showed in that matter that he is a God-fearing man. I use this medium to express my heartfelt gratitude to him; he is an example of what policing should be. Efforts by the suspects and their sponsors to bribe their ways out and foreclose the matter were resisted by him.

    How is your wife coping with her status?

    Knowing that what she was diagnosed with is yet without medical solution, we resorted to seeking divine interventions. I took her to the Synagogue Church in Lagos, but unfortunately, we could not see the man of God, Pastor T. B. Joshua. The reason was that we did not go with her medical report.

    What is the position of your marriage?

    No comment on that.

    When was the last time you saw or called your wife?

    She is my wife. I don’t have comment on that still. My prayer is that God should show us mercy and heal her. She should also understand the fact that nobody other than God can heal her in this situation and her faith in God is very important at this point in time.

    When we went to Lagos, I bought a copy of the Bible for her. I never discriminated against her. We slept on the same bed, ate from the same plate, drank from the same cup. At my brother’s house where we stayed in Lagos, he provided different rooms for us but I left my own room for hers and we slept on the same bed. All to encourage her to be prayerful and study her Bible to build up her faith; because that is where lies the solution we need.

    My prayers always are that God may extend that divine mercy He has shown to me also to her. She is my wife.

    If God heals your wife of this disease today, will you take her back?

    (Smiles) I never divorced my wife. She is still my wife. I still give her courage. I always communicate with her elder brother even though I barely reach her. The last time I went to their Owerri residence I was told they had moved. The brother always denies knowledge of where she is.

     

     

  • ‘Woman in rape video is my wife’

    ‘Woman in rape video is my wife’

    After months of investigations, Southsouth Regional Editor SHOLA O’NEIL and ROSEMARY NWISI reveal the missing links in the 2011 rape video erroneously tagged ‘Abia rape video’. They unravel the victim’s identity, the Rivers State scene of the crime and how the victim was infected with HIV, which claimed the life of the child she was carrying.

    On a rainy Sunday afternoon in June, Obite, Etche Local Government Area of Rivers State wore an innocent look. Nothing gave it away as the scene where four men gang-raped a pregnant wife of their relative and indigene of the community.

    Driving through the tranquil town on that soggy Sunday, it was hard to picture it as the setting for the sordid rape that travelled through and repulsed the world in 2011 and became erroneously known as ‘Abia rape’.

    Mr Stanley Sunday (not his real name), husband of the victim, said Obite was where the crime took place. The police think so too.

    Pointing to a nondescript bungalow in one of the suburbs, Mr. S (as he preferred to be known in this report) told Niger Delta Report in an emotion-laden voice: “That is where they raped my wife”.

    The hapless woman was pregnant with a child, whose fate was sadly sealed by the rape.

    Mr S refused to speak with us inside his house – a bungalow on the outskirts of the village – because of fear that we could be attacked by the rapists and ‘their sponsor’.

    “We must talk quickly and you leave; I do not want to put your lives in danger,” he said.

    When reports of the rape first surfaced on the internet in August 2011, it was said to have occurred at the Abia State University (ABSU). The rapists were thought to be students of ABSU. Governor Theodore Orji and his wife Mercy lent their voices to the gale of condemnation, with ABSU denying that”there was no such inglorious act and ugly incident in the institution.”

    Mr. S said: “Some of the rapists did not even finish their secondary education; none of them is a student of the institution.”

    The heartbroken man hinted of conspiracy between some powerful persons in the community, including a member of his extended family, and the rapists.

    “They know what they did; the activities they and their boss are engaged in,” he added.

    He said his wife told him that there were eight men in the room when she was molested.

    “Four of them raped her, while the other four acted as bouncers, guard and commanders.”

     

    Kept in the dark

    Our checks revealed that the distraught husband found out about the sordid affair late. He had also lost a son to HIV/AIDS infection, which his wife is believed to have contacted from the rapists.

    Attempts by our reporter to speak with the victim met brick walls. At her family’s home in Nazi, Owerri, where she moved in with her parents, we were told she had relocated to the village, ostensibly because of the stigma from the incident.

    Her sibling, who was contacted on telephone, became suspicious and hung as soon as we told him we were trying to reach his sister.

    Over one year after he found out, Mr S could not completely conceal the hurt and betrayal in his voice when he spoke.

    He said he found out about the rape of his wife through his colleagues. He was working offshore when his colleagues started discussing the “evils going on in the society. They said I should see what evil people are doing. I was not interested until they started talking about a sad one that happened in Abia State. They said university students raped their colleague, videoed and posted it on the internet. I said they must be cultists to have done such things.

    “When they started narrating it, I got interested and asked to see the video. When I saw it (video), I listened to what the woman was saying but it was her voice that struck me. I was shocked; I said within myself ‘am I dreaming?’ The woman in the video had my wife’s voice, face and the hair style?

    “I couldn’t contain myself; I asked my colleague to transfer the video to my mobile phone. I did not tell him why I wanted the video, but I wanted to compare it with her (wife’s) photo I have on my laptop computer back at home.”

    After some time, he got time-off from work in an offshore location and went home to confront his wife and his worst nightmare. He said the woman initially denied she was the woman in the video before he pressured her into confessing.

    Obite’s indigenes, who asked not to be named, said the husband was so angry that he summoned a family meeting and threatened to divorce his wife, if she did not open up.

    “It was then that the woman narrated that she was going to visit her husband’s relative when she was lured into the house by the suspects, some of whom are her husband’s relatives,” said a source.

    Confirming this, Mr S said: “She said she hid it from me because of the threat to her life, my own life and those of our family members.”

    More intriguing, according to our checks, was that most of the man’s relatives in the town reportedly knew about it before he was aware. More perplexing, Mr S said, was that one of his relatives, a very influential member of the community, was fingered as the godfather of the boys, who raped his wife.

    “I didn’t know what she was going through, what had happened to my wife. She was living with me and cooking for me while living this horror and fear that they would kill her if she told me or go to the police.

    “The worst aspect of the case is that they infected her with the deadly disease (HIV). When this incident happened, my wife was pregnant (about two months).”

    Yet his feeling of sorrow and empathy failed to save the marriage. Although he would not confirm or deny report that he was separated from his wife, yet he said he had not seen her for over two months when we met him in Obite.

    “She is living with her parents in Owerri. I do call her and we talk once in a while. I even took her to TB Joshua’s church in Lagos when we were finding solution to the case (her infection).”

     

    HIV Infection

    Our investigations revealed that the husband’s anger was fuelled by a tragedy that earlier struck the couple in 2011 when their six-month-old son – the first child of the marriage – died of complications resulting from a mysterious HIV infection.

    He said: “The child was taken to a children’s clinic located in GRA Phase 1, Port Harcourt after he fell ill with cough, about two months after his birth. He was coughing without stopping and we had to take the child to the specialist hospital.”

    At the hospital, the child and mother were diagnosed with the deadly Human Immune Virus (HIV). The blood report from a Haematology Laboratory Request form dated August 5, 2011, (a copy is in Niger Delta Report’s possession), showed that the mother and child tested positive to HIV antibodies. The father’s result was negative.

    The result struck a blow that shook the young marriage to its foundation.

    The child was barely two months old and had just be dedicated at a Pentecostal church with fanfare and an elaborate celebration party in mid-June 2011.

    Before the incident, Mr S was surprised when the doctors asked for his blood sample for a routine test.

    “I told them that it was my child that was ill and not me. But they insisted and I had to allow them even though I didn’t know why.”

    After the test, top management staff of the hospital (names withheld) invited the couple to a meeting where they broke the sad news to them. “They told me I am a lucky man; my wife and son had HIV but I don’t have. I was surprised. I didn’t know what to say. I asked ‘what is the luck in that when my wife and child were infected?’”

    The hospital declined comment when contacted. An official politely cited the sensitive nature of the diagnosis and doctor/patient secrecy oath, stressing that the hospital should not be mentioned in this report.

    A medical source, who spoke on condition of anonymity, confirmed the report.

    It was gathered that the revelation rocked the foundation of the couple’s marriage with both family members getting involved in the effort to solve the mystery. Mrs S was accused of infidelity and almost sent packing when the child died two months later.

    Yet, she refused to disclose the source of her anguish until her husband confronted her with the video.

     

    More intrigues

    It was while the couple was managing the crisis resulting from the child’s death that Mr. S stumbled on the rape video and possible answer to mystery of the HIV infection.

    If his wife was cowed by the threat, the angry husband was unfazed and determined to bring the harbingers of his misfortune to justice. He immediately dragged his wife to the Rivers State Police Command’s Criminal Investigation Department. The case was assigned to an inspector of police identified as Mr. Eneje.

    The victim was taken in by the police for interrogation after which she identified three suspects as part of the gang. A fourth suspect narrowly escaped and was still at large at the time of this report.

    The suspects are: Uchenna Ukulor, Chizoba Nwosu, Nwazuo Nmezi and one person at large.

    Mr S said as soon as the suspects were arrested, some prominent members of the community met and decided that he withdrew the case from the police and let bygone be bygone. When he refused, he said he was banished from the community.

    However, it was gathered that weeks after the police began investigation, Mr S lost his job. He claimed that he was victimised because of his insistence on bringing his wife’s abusers to justice. He said some members of the society boasted after he lost his job that”let’s see how he is going to pursue the case now”.

    He added: “Since I came to the knowledge of the incident and began the move to prosecute the suspects, my life has been under threat; the suspects are after me, their sponsor (names withheld), is after me. They have been making frantic efforts to eliminate me.”

    He said the threats were so serious that he and his wife had to temporarily relocate to the Police Headquarters during the investigations.

    Attempts to scuttle the case

    Although scores of persons were either arrested or interrogated over the incident, the trial has dragged on for over a year amid reports of attempts to bribe the police and other agencies involved in the prosecution.

    Police Inspector Eneje, who investigated the matter, refused to comment on reports that he was offered inducement to ‘close the case’. He said the police had concluded its investigation and arrested suspects who were charged to Magistrate’s Court 9, Port Harcourt.

    Records obtained from the court indicated that the case file was transferred to the Department of Public Prosecution (DPP) for advice last year after the court declined jurisdiction on the ground that it was not competent to try the suspects.

    At the DPP office, a source, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the prosecution was delayed when certain key evidence disappeared from the file.

    Our source said: “The photographs and other exhibits needed to prosecute the case disappeared but I think efforts are being made to retrieve them now.”

    Solicitor-General of the State and Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Justice, Rufus Godwin, who was contacted, referred us to the chief registrar, insisting that he could not speak on the case without the charge sheet number.

     

    ‘Rapists’ on the loose

    Nevertheless, while the case winds painfully through prosecution, the suspects, Ukulor, Nwosu and Nmezi, have returned to their normal lives, much to the angst of Mr S, his distraught wife and members of the human rights community.

    It was gathered that the suspects were granted bail in late last year.

    Mr S, who said the release of the suspects, has further heightened fear over his safety, said: “We don’t even know the position of the matter now; since last year we were told that the DPP advice was being awaited. The suspects are walking freely everywhere; even one of them just got wedded about two months ago.”

    He said his family has been let down by the government, which allowed the case to drag on until it is almost forgotten.

    He said: “Well, one thing I believe is that the crime, humiliation was not committed only against me, they did it to Nigeria, Nigerians in general and women all over the world in particular.”

    The Director of Programmes, Centre for Environment, Human Rights Development (CEHRD), Steve Obodoekwe, agreed that the crime was against humanity, not just the family involved.

    He expressed dissatisfaction with Ministry of Justice’s handling of the case, adding: “It is not one of such cases that should be swept under the carpet; it is unfortunate to hear that the matter is as good as dead.

    “Right now, we learnt that the suspects earlier arraigned in a Magistrate’s Court in connection with the crime are no longer in custody, even when the DPP’s advice is yet being expected and the matter not yet before any High Court either in the state or country. This is, indeed, very appalling.”

    He called for the conduct of a probe on how the suspects ‘escaped’ from custody.

    Obodoekwe said: “They should be rearrested and detained, charged to court and tried accordingly. We are also recommending that those that let them off the hooks should be equally fished out and given the same treatment as the criminals.

    “This is because, we are in Nigeria, and obviously nothing goes for nothing in this country. Those that released them from custody must have done deals with them, and so should be given even worse treatment than the suspects.

    “A serious matter like ‘gang rape’ is what we are talking about here, you arrested some suspects took them to the Magistrate’s Court which we know have no powers to try capital offences. Now we are hearing that they are moving freely everywhere like free persons. It is unheard of; it is evil.

    “One thing that is certain in this whole issue is that the incident is not a crime against the victim and her family; it is a crime, humiliation against the state, Federal Government and I want the ministry of justice to know this.”

    It is uncertain when the family will get justice, but what is sure is that the last has not been heard of this gang rape, even though the video has been pulled from the internet.

     

     

  • Rapist jailed 8 years for defiling 12-year-old

    Justice Adekanye Ogunmoye  of a High Court sitting in Ado-Ekiti on Friday jailed a casual labourer, Innocent Eze  for eight  years for raping a twelve-year-old girl.
    Eze,  an indigene of Nsukka, Enugu State, bagged one year for indecent assault and seven years for the defilement, the two counts which, according to the judgment were contrary to Sections 360 and 218 of the Criminal Code Act, Cap C38, Laws of the Federation of Nigeria 2004.
    Justice Adekanye, in his judgment, recalled that the convict, on August 31, 2011, in Ijan-Ekiti, had seized the young girl who had just assisted him to fetch water from a well, threw her onto his bed  and raped her.
    He, according to the judgment, later stuffed a handkerchief in the violated girl’s private part when blood started oozing out after the act and also gave her N100 to “buy drugs.”
     The judgment read in part: “This is definitely a barbaric act and the sentence must be such as would serve as deterrent to the convict and others who still harbor similar tendencies.
    “Accordingly, my sentence on the convict is that he is sentenced to 1 year imprisonment in count 1 and he is also sentenced to 7 years imprisonment in count 2. Terms are concurrent.”
    Justice Adekanye said: “It’s unfortunate that a 12-year-old girl would have been sexually defiled as was done to the victim in this case. It is more unfortunate that the matter came to the public domain.
    “The convict by his act had succeeded in placing a stigma on the person of the victim, which may take a long time to erase. The trauma suffered by the victim is definitely such as would take a longer time to forget.
    “The act of the convict is not such as should be encouraged. This is definitely a barbaric act and the sentence must be such as would serve as deterrence to the convict and others who still harbour similar tendencies.”

     

  • ‘Anyone involved in  rape is not man enough’

    ‘Anyone involved in rape is not man enough’

    By March next year, Governor Peter Obi will be handing over to another democratically elected governor to preside over the affairs of the state, but his wife’s role as the First Lady of Anambra State remains indelible. The First Lady who hardly speaks to the press was caught off guard by Odogwu Emeka Odogwu in Nnewi at a function last weekend, where she spoke about her challenges in the last seven years and three months in office as the number one mother of the state.

     

     

    WHAT is your message to the parents and children of Anambra State?

    Recently, we celebrated our children and the theme of this year’s celebrations was Our children, our future and our collective responsibility. This is a powerful theme that encompasses the family, the government and the children and the entire society.

    So, we thank Mr. President for a well articulated speech on the right of the children, what we will attain as a country in 2020 and steps taken to better the lives of our children.

    I thank my husband too for his compassion on Anambra children and the much he has done as a person and his government, especially to the orphans and vulnerable children as well as the physically-challenged in our midst. Our governor had also championed the education of the Anambra child by grants and outright investments in scholarship, funding and provision of facilities needed for better learning and sound education.

    Our governor’s investment in education is unequalled and he has moved the status of the primary and secondary schools in our state as well as the institutions. These are glaring facts for us to verify. You can ask any child what the governor or the government has done in his or her school and the person would reel them out.

    I am not saying we have done everything but I am saying that we have changed the face of our state from the situation it was when we met it and the person coming after us should do better than we have been able to do. That is why there is need to vote in a credible candidate that has the interest of Anambra State at heart for the development to continue.

    There is a rampant issue of baby factory now especially in the South East, how do you see that of Anambra and do you have any warning for them?

    In Anambra State, the Ministry of Women Affairs and Social Development has been working with the National Agency for Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons and other related matters (NAPTIP).

    We strongly condemn the issue of baby factory or sale of children. This is against our own moral values. Though fostering is allowed, anybody that wants to foster a child must go through the Ministry of Women Affairs and take the correct step. We are working with NAPTIP. We are working with the courts to ensure that this kind of illegal practice is not done in our state and that is why our governor has put so much in the area of education, so that we can educate our girl children in all facets. We don’t have this issue of infant mortality, maternal mortality and baby factory.

    Our government instructed social workers and ministry staff as well as all those directly or indirectly involved with child fostering, development and care to be very careful and we have mounted surveillance on all motherless babies’ homes and hospitals previously linked with such inhuman practice. Those we caught we have dealt with accordingly because we are collaborating with the security operatives. That is why Anambra is calm for now; you are hearing this and that happening elsewhere.

    Our government indeed took proactive measures to nip this mess in the bud by making illegal homes who deal in illicit baby factory to vacate the state. We have warned those indulging in illegal adoption of babies and outright selling of babies to desist as we would not take it lightly. When such illegal homes came up last year, the governor ordered the Ministry of Women Affairs and Social Development to close all illegal motherless babies’ homes and ensure that only those registered operate. And after that we banned all illegal homes termed ‘baby factories’ in the state.

    Our state Ministry of Women Affairs and Social Development is working in partnership with the National Agency for The Prohibition of Traffic in Persons and Other Related Matters, NAPTIP, because we as a government condemn in strong terms any form of illegal baby adoption

    or outright baby selling.

    Baby factory is an injustice against children and against moral values our society is known for. Our laws on baby fostering and adoption is sacrosanct and must be complied with by anybody setting up a motherless babies’ home in the state. Once that is not done, the home is illegal and we have ordered all illegal homes and operators to leave the state within 48 hours.

    It is illegal and that is why our government has taken issues relating to children seriously, including education, mother and child mortality and health care services.

    Children must be protected from all forms of abuse since the child’s right is all about child survival, participation, protection and development. I urge all stakeholders to see that they prevent, protect and respond to violence, abuse and exploitation wherever it occurs against children physically, psychologically and socially.

    What plans do you have for children?

    We have a lot for children. We have a very strong children’s parliament. We really commend the Ministry of Education, all the educational bodies and Ministry of Local Government Affairs for the wonderful performance of the children in the calisthenics and we will try to encourage these children so that they can go at the national level, even at the international level.

    Our governor is education friendly and we insist that every child must be educated in Anambra State. The schools have been handed over to the churches and we believe it’s bringing back morality to our children. There is a great difference between what we have now in our schools and what we had then.

    What is your take on the incessant case of rape in Anambra State?

    Rape is also what we strongly condemn and we urge anybody that is faced with this kind of problem to report to the police. We are working with the police to curtail the issues of rape and bring perpetrators to book by taking them to the law court. Any man involved in rape is not man enough. Women should be respected and their dignity upheld in all circumstances.

    Do you think that the issue of first ladies in Nigeria is fashionable?

    Even the Bible says that a man should leave his mother and father and join with the woman and they become one and the woman will be the help mate. The issue of the offices of the wives of governors or first ladies or whatever you might call us are not a constitutional one as you know but we are help mates to our husbands to enhance our husband’s offices with programmes for the elderly, for the women, for the men and for the children and for the country at large.

    We are committed to uplifting humanity and we are not leaving any stone unturned. So we are very important, integral part of every government.

    How would you talk about your seven years in office?

    I thank God for being in office for the past years through thick and thin and for being able to sustain us. This is one of the experiences I wouldn’t have missed and I thank God for giving me the opportunity. It was indeed a great period serving our people and having the opportunity of knowing great people in our state and beyond.

    It is actually a call to serve and for which I thank all Anambrarian, because it has been a collective process. We couldn’t have done it on our own. So, we thank God and we thank every other person for all the assistance and cooperation they have given us and I pray God in His infinite mercy to bring somebody that can do better than my husband and that will take the state to a greater height.

    What do you think should be done to make women have a voice in Nigeria and in Anambra State?

    Already, women in Anambra State and Nigeria have a voice. If you can see the changes that have come through our amiable wife of the president, you can see she talks about an initiative called Women for Change, where women are advocating for 35 percent, and we have been able to achieve this even at the federal level and on the state level through our amiable, people friendly governor.

    You can see we have achieved more than 35 percent in Anambra State. Women have been able to achieve very high positions in the state like the speaker of the House of Assembly, she is a woman; the commissioners, we have 5 of them, even in the House of Representatives we have as many as seven women.

    And now, with the institution called Association of Anambra State Town Union (ASATU) women wing which is the leadership of women in different communities, we have been able to create the women wing for the women where the women can interact and through that have a voice and address issues in the communities and in the state.

    Every year, you empower over 10,000 women in Anambra State and we saw this during last year’s visitation, what do we expect this August?

    August is a very significant month for women. And because of long vacation during this period, women from everywhere in the federation return home en mass to deliberate on issues concerning women and the society at large.

    Other sections of the country are now emulating the South-East known for August meetings.

  • Court jails man 20 years for rape

    A  24-year-old man, Nnauka Okoro, has been sentenced to 20 years’ imprisonment for rape.

    Okoro, an indigene of Abiriba, Bende Local Government Area of Abia State was found guilty of raping, stealing and assaulting his victim, a 27-year-old lady, who came to visit her brother, who was his neighbour.

    The prosecutor, Inspector Sunday Asuquo, told the Aba North Chief Magistrate’s Court that the accused on July 4 at Royal Palm Area, Ogbor Hill, Aba, assaulted, stole and raped his victim; an offence he said was punishable under Section 355, 390 and 358 of the Nigerian Criminal Code.

    Asuquo urged the court to take appropriate legal action to ensure that the complainant was not denied justice.

    Okoro pleaded guilty to the charges but begged the court for leniency.

    The Magistrate, K. I Udo, gave the accused 10 years for rape, five years for stealing and five years for assault.

    The Magistrate ordered that the stolen items be returned to the complainant.

    A family source, who pleaded for anonymity, narrated how the incident happened.

    He said: “The lady came from Lagos to visit her brother who lives at Ogbor-Hill.

    “On that day, the accused disguised himself and attacked the victim when she came out to the corridor to do some chores.

    “He pushed her into the room, threatening to shoot her if she did not comply . She initially refused, but the guy stabbed her on the cheek with a dagger.

    “The guy defiled her and she stabbed him in the lower part of his body with the same dagger.

    “He stole some valuables from the house before fleeing. The victim called her brother who alerted the police. They instituted a search operation and later saw the guy (Okoro) bleeding with all the things he had stolen from the house, including the materials he used to disguise himself.”

    The source, who hailed the ruling, called for more stringent penalties for people found guilty of rape.

     

     

  • Bishop, quack doctor arrested for alleged rape, abortion

    •I was framed, says cleric

    Ten of the State Criminal Investigative Department (SCID) in the Rivers State Police Command have paraded a Port Harcourt Pentecostal Bishop, Chibuike Nwabueze, for allegedly impregnating a 15-year-old church member.

    Also paraded was a fake doctor, Kazeem Abimbola, who was held for allegedly conducting an abortion on the victim, on the directives of the bishop.

    Bishop Nwabueze admitted committing the crime, but alleged a set up.

    The self-acclaimed chairman of Communion of Bishops alleged that he was framed by another bishop over their tussle for the chairmanship seat of the Nigerian Peace Ambassador.

    He said: “Of the various bishop groups we have, I chair the Communion of Bishops. What has happened is a set up by my enemies.

    “This bishop is my enemy; he is the person who framed me. He invited me for a programme in his church, which I honoured. But after the programme he set me up, because of what we are dragging. We are contesting the chairmanship of peace ambassador.

    “I am a prophetic grace minister and I have been a pastor for over 20 years. I am a deliverance minister after I had concluded my ministration in that church that evening; I had a revelation that a family that attended the programme had some problems that they needed to be prayed for.

    “By the unction of the spirit of God I identified and assembled them together, including the victim, after praying for them in the open church, I told the father of the girl that I will still need to pray for them again and he accepted.

    “When I came the following day to conduct the prayers, other family members did not come. The father asked her to come with me for the prayers; after the prayers the girl hypnotised me, pulled her clothes off and I had canal knowledge of her.

    “One month later, the father called me to say his daughter was pregnant, I advised that she keep the baby, but the father insisted that the girl should return to school. They took her for the abortion which I paid for.”

    The Divisional Officer, Samuel Okaula, advised families to be mindful of where their wards go to worship.

    “The man has been parading himself as the chairman of bishops in Rivers State and it is unfortunate that a man, who calls himself a man of God, could descend to the level of defiling a 15-year-old girl.

    “Not only that, he procured an illegal abortion which could have terminated the life of that innocent girl.

    “We want the whole world to know that this kind of crime cannot go unpunished. We have concluded our investigations and we are ready to go to court.”