Tag: Sexual abuse

  • Lagos records 8,692 cases of sexual abuse in one year

    Lagos records 8,692 cases of sexual abuse in one year

    Lagos State has said that 8,692 cases of Sexual and Gender Based Violence (SGBV) were reported in the state in the last year.

    The Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice, Lawal Pedro (SAN), who disclosed this yesterday, however, stated that the state, through the Ministry of Justice, is taking necessary steps to restore hope and confidence in the victims, enabling them to overcome the trauma.

    Pedro disclosed this while briefing the press on the Domestic and Sexual Violence awareness month, which comes up in September.

    The state’s Attorney General also stated that 90 per cent of the survivors disclosed that they have experienced low self-esteem, Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), extreme fear and anxiety, while about 5 per cent suffered from depression and had to seek medical help.

    The Attorney General said the theme of the awareness month for this year is “SGBV? It concerns us all.” He said the topic was chosen because SGBV is not a respecter of age.

    The Attorney General, who was represented by the Permanent Secretary and the Solicitor General of the ministry, Hamid Oyenuga, said all stakeholders will be involved in the awareness program.

    He also stated that, for the first time, the private sector would be involved.

    According to Pedro, “We are also set to launch the guidelines on Sexual harassment prevention in the workplace, thereby fostering safer and more respectful work environments.

    “Children would not be left out, as the safeguarding and child protection week would witness the gathering of over 1,200 students, debates on the topic- It’s okay to tell,” Pedro explained.

    Read Also: Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs accused of sexual abuse in six new lawsuits

    Shedding more light on the activities of the agency involved in sexual abuse, he noted that between August 2024 and July 2025, the DSVA received a total of 8,692 cases through both physical walk-ins and the Virtual Referral and Response Service (VRRS), and on average, the Agency attends to over 400 clients monthly.

    He said 3,685 cases of domestic violence were reported, making it the most prevalent category. According to him, 243 cases of defilement and 244 cases of child abuse and physical assault were handled; 99 cases of rape, 48 cases of sexual harassment, and 25 cases of sexual assault by penetration were also recorded.

    Pedro said the DSVA conducted a total of 402 preliminary investigations and rescue missions of survivors of Domestic and Sexual Violence in Lagos State.

    During the period under review, he said, a total of 57 safeguarding and child protection concerns were received by the Lagos State Taskforce on Safeguarding and Child Protection, which comprises the Office of Education Quality Assurance and the Department of School Social Work of the Ministry of Youth and Social Development, Ministry of Health, DSVA and NGOs.

    “One of the agency’s main responsibilities is to provide immediate and quick response to SGBV cases by providing support, counselling, empowerment, shelter, mediation, and other referrals and services to survivors”, he said.

    The Attorney General disclosed that out of the 20 Local Government Areas in the  State, the top  LGA with the highest reporting for adults includes Alimosho, Eti-Osa, Ikorodu, Kosofe, and Oshodi-Isolo Isolo while for cases involving children, high reporting was from Ikorodu, Kosofe, Badagry, Alimosho and Oshodi-Isolo, respectively.

    Pedro highlighted that a significant 3,090 children were identified as having suffered emotional abuse due to exposure to domestic violence at home.

    He said DSVA provided them with counselling support to ensure they are not permanently scarred by these experiences.

    “The youngest survivor was 18 months old, while the oldest survivor of domestic violence was a 79-year-old woman, demonstrating that SGBV affects every age group.”

    Pedro said free legal aid was provided to 146 survivors through in-house lawyers, the Bureau of the Public Defender, private law firms and the Lagos Public Interest Law Partnership.

    He maintained that the agency gave support to the victims by providing health care services for them, whereby survivors received treatment at General Hospitals, Primary Health Centres, and referral centres such as Mirabel Centre, WARIF, and Idera Centre.

    Pedro stated that shelter and safety were provided for 30 survivors as they were housed at Eko Haven and other safe shelters, and listed other support rendered to the victims to include psychological and rescue missions.

    He stressed that during the period under review, the analysis revealed that male reports were higher compared to previous years for adults.

    He added by saying, “With growing awareness of mental wellness and the need to continue to ensure the psycho-social wellbeing of couples for a better society, the Clinical Psychology Department provided Psychotherapy and psycho social support for 1489 survivors, including children, and 249 abusers respectively.”

  • Tackling child-on-child sexual abuse menace

    Tackling child-on-child sexual abuse menace

    The Chrisland schools sex tape incident has brought to the fore the silent, but growing problem of child-on-child sexual abuse. Shockingly, there is hardly any direct provision on the issue in the Child’s Rights Act, Children and Young Persons Act (CYPA), Violence Against Persons Prohibition (VAPP) Act and other child-friendly laws, leaving government and other regulators handicapped in checking the menace, reports ROBERT EGBE.

    It took almost 17 years after she left secondary school for Obiamaka Azubike to muster the courage to name the students she holds responsible for her May 1, 2000 ordeal

    Azubike told her story in papers filed on her behalf by her lawyers at Falana and Falana Chambers at the Lagos High Court.

    She stated that on that May Day night, she was sexually and physically assaulted by 13 of her schoolmates. She was, at the time, a final year student and the Public Relations (PR) Prefect at her alma mater, Olashore International School (OIS) in Osun State.

    Azubike filed her statement in defence to a suit by a former school prefect al OIS, Okwuchi Ogboi.

    It reads in part. “On the 1st of May 2001, the school hosted its annual entry exams onsite, and the Defendant (Azubike) as PR Prefect had what seemed to be a perfect day until the fateful night.

    Senior House Debates/Public Speaking was held in the main school hall that night around 8pm and the Defendant went to the hill with three of her female classmates only to be told that SS3 students were exempted from attending the event as they had exams to write soon. The Defendant and her friend subsequently decided to return to the hostel.

    “While the Defendant and her friend were heading back to their hostel that night, the Defendant was sexually assaulted by 13 of her male classmates, including the Claimant, as they all inserted their hands, gripping and thrusting into all the sensitive parts of her body with utmost disregard and as well laughing at her tears till help came.

    “She managed to run while the assaulters, including the Claimant, chased her but when they realised that she was headed towards Dr. Burgess, the School Principal’s residence, they all tactically withdrew.”

    Ogbol, now a Senior Special Adviser to the Delta Suite Governor on Special Duties, denied any involvement in any such incident, describing Azubike’s claims earlier made on social media, as false and libellous.

    He is seeking N250million from Azubike for the alleged severe injury he suffered because of Azubike’s alleged defamatory publications against him.

    On her part, Azubike is countersuing for N510million as damages from Ogboi for the alleged sexual and physical assault.

    In February, OIS, the Trustees of Olashore International School Association, and proprietor of OIS, inaugurated a five-member panel of inquiry to unravel the truth and make recommendations on the incident.

    Pupil-on-pupil sex scandal

    Last week, another pupil-on-pupil sex scandal hit the headlines following a leaked sex tape involving several minors of the highbrow Chrisland Schools.

    One of the children’s mum alleged that her then 10-year-old daughter was raped during a trip to Dubai, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), which was organised by the school.

    Pupils from the private school were in Dubai to participate in the World School Games between March 10 and 13, 2022.

    In a viral video shared on April 18 by music executive Ubi Franklin, via his Instagram page, the woman claimed that she was not aware of what happened in Dubai till another parent showed her the video of the incident.

    “As I was beating my daughter, she opened up to me and said the school threatened her not to speak out … My daughter was dying in silence and I did not know. Every day, I would be forcing her out of the room but she wouldn’t want to go to school,” she said.

    She alleged that the school “attempted to hide the issue” and that her daughter was taken for pregnancy tests “without my knowledge.”

    She added: “When I asked her what happened, my daughter said on the day of the incident, they went out in the morning to have breakfast and one of the boys begged her to lend him her phone charger which she did.

    “She said later in the evening the boy called her room and asked her to come for the charger in his room. So she went there. When she got to the room for the charger, they opened the door and one of the boys asked her to go and get her charger inside the toilet. She could it was when she entered the toilet that the boys surrounded her and asked her to drink a substance.

    “She said they were all under the influence of drugs after that and she did not know what she was doing again. My daughter said the boys asked her to climb on them while one of them was filming and sending out the videos.”

    Chrisland’s position

    Chrisland Schools authorities had, in a letter dated April 14, 2022, to the girl’s parents, suspended the pupil, claiming that she was the ringleader of a truth or dare game held in Dubai.

    “In line with our core values centred on discipline, Chrisland Schools have zero tolerance for any improper behaviour and misconduct,” the school said in the letter signed by its principal Georgia Azike.

    The school disclosed that other schoolmates who took part in the game had been suspended too, alleging that the girl and her parents did not cooperate during its investigation.

    Similarly, on December 19, 2020, an 1I-year-old Junior Secondary School (ISS) 1 student of Deeper Life High School in Uyo, Akwa Ibom State was allegedly molested and subjected to inhumane torture in the school.

    The boy’s mother, Deborah Okezie raised the alarm on social media after going to pick up her son at the end of the term. It was reported that the pupil narrated how he suffered at the hands of a teacher and students in his dormitory who sexually assaulted him by sticking their hands in his anus when others were sleeping.

    Afterwards, six of the members of staff of the school, including the principal, vice principal and housemaster were arraigned at a magistrate’s court for sexual molestation, maltreatment, starvation, and negligence

    Child-on-child sexual abuse/ Children in conflict with the law

    The OIS, Deeper Life and Chrisland schools incidents are examples of what experts refer to as child-on-child sexual abuse.

    A Cross River State-based activist-lawyer James Ibor, described child-on-child sexual abuse with reference to the Chirisland schools sex tape saga as an example of “children in conflict with the law.”

    Three University of Miami researchers, Jon A. Shaw, John E. Lewis, Andrea Loeb, James Rosado and Rosemarie A. Rodriguez in their book “Child on child sexual abuse: Psychological perspectives” defined child-on-child sexual abuse as a form of child sexual abuse in which a prepubescent child is sexually abused by one or more children or adolescents, and in which no adult is directly involved.

    They noted that this includes when one of the children uses physical force, threats, trickery or emotional manipulation to elicit cooperation.

    It also can include non-coercive situations where the initiator proposes or starts a sexual act that the victim does not understand the nature of and simply goes along with, not comprehending its Implications or what the consequences might be.

    While child-on-child sexual abuse is fairly well-researched in western jurisdictions, it is only becoming increasingly recognised as a problem in the developing world.

    For instance, an analysis of the phenomenon” by a South African Dr. Shaheda Omar found that child-on-child sexual abuse in South Africa has been recognised only recently as a significant social problem, reflected in the dearth of research on it.

    In “A study of child-on-child sexual abuse of children under 12 years”, Omar quoted data showing that an estimated 42 per cent of sexual offences reported to Childline, were committed by other children.

    Consequence on children

    Shaw, Lewis, Loeb, Rosado and Rodriguez found that child sex victims are exposed to clinical issues including attention problems, delinquent behaviour, sex problems, social problems, thought problems, withdrawn behaviour, and other emotional and behavioural problems.

    Is the menace widespread?

    The World Health Organization (WHO) definition of Child Sexual Abuse (CSA) seems to cover the phenomenon. It describes CSA as the involvement of a child in sexual activity that he or she does not fully comprehend, is unable to give informed consent to, or for which the child is not developmentally prepared and cannot give consent, or that violate the laws or social taboos of society. Any form of sexual touching exposure to pornographic content or even taking of sexual images through filming or photography will also amount to child sexual abuse.

    There is anecdotal evidence that the phenomenon is not uncommon locally. Many Nigerians are aware of instances where children have been caught engaging in age-inappropriate sexual behaviour, including child-on-child abuse.

    An Ikeja High Court in Lagos on February 14, 2022, discharged and acquitted a part-time Arabic teacher, Mr. Anisere Sulaimon, of a defilement and sexual assault charge after he spent almost four years in detention.

    Justice R. A. Oshodi noted that the evidence showed that it was a relation of the child, one Kehinde Adedeji – himself a minor at the time -that used to have carnal knowledge of her, not Sulaimon.

    The judge noted further that the prosecution witness said Adedeji, an uncle to the child, confessed to the crime of defiling the four-year-old.

    “Under cross-examination, PW] (Prosecution Witness 1) said that one Kehinde Adedeji, who is an uncle to the victim, confessed to the crime of defiling the victim,” Justice Oshodi held.

    Laws largely silent

    However, Nigerian laws are largely silent on child-on-child sexual abuse, suggesting that it is not acknowledged as a major menace.

    The Criminal Code, applicable in Southern Nigeria, and the Penal Code, applicable in Northern Nigeria, both make provisions for the related offences of rape and defilement.

    For instance, Section 216 of the Criminal Code regards the indecent treatment of minors under 14 as an offence of felony liable to imprisonment for seven years if done without consent. Section 218 of the Criminal Code recognises the defilement of girls under the age of 13 as an offence of felony liable to imprisonment for life. Section 221 of the Criminal Code provides that the defilement of girls under 16 and above 13 as an offence of misdemeanour is liable for imprisonment of two years.

    The Child Rights Act 2010 also requires that the well-being of every child must be respected and considered paramount and provides that sex with a child is rape, and anyone who has sexual Intercourse with a child is liable to imprisonment for life upon conviction.

    Under the heading “Unlawful Sexual Intercourse, etc.,” Section 31(3) states that “Where a person is charged with an offence under this section, it is immaterial that (a) the offender believed the person to be of or above the age of eighteen years; or (b) the sexual intercourse was with the consent of the child.”

    Read Also: German priest suspended after admitting to sexual abuse of minor

    However, in cases of child-on-child sexual abuse, the participants are minors, thus, rendering the provisions directly inapplicable.

    Can minors commit rape?

    The actors in the Chrisland Schools video appear to all be minors. But a child’s mum raised rape allegations. Can a rape charge against any of the pupils be sustained?

    Human rights lawyer Bukky Shonibare weighed in on the matter.

    Shonibare, the Executive Director, Invictus Africa, said: “Nigerian law is silent as it relates to statutory rape generally and by statutory rape; which is the argument in relation to the Chrisland Schools case, is to say that when (sex) occurs presumably between an adult and a child who has not attained the statutory age of consent, such kind of act is deemed as statutory rape.

    “Section 31 of the Child’s Rights Act clearly states that 18 years is the age of consent In the Chrisland case issue; these children are between the ages of 11 and 13 years old, so, generally, they do not fall under the age for us to say that statutory rape has happened.

    “Also, our criminal laws generally, i.e. Section 357 of the Criminal Code Act, Section 282 of the Penal Code Act and Section 1 of the Violence Against Persons Prohibition (VAPP) Act do not talk about statutory rape. So, none of the laws we currently have in Nigeria contemplate situations where both the perpetrators and victims, as in this case, are minors. If any legal or criminal action is brought, it will have to be decided on the general case of rape.

    Can ‘Romeo and Juliet’ laws help?

    Shonibare cited laws in the West as examples of what Nigeria can emulate.

    She said: “What countries like the United States and the United Kingdom have done is to enact what they call the “Rome and Juliet” laws, or the “Close in age exemption”.

    “Such exemption contemplates that rape could also occur between minors and when such rape happens, what that law does is to serve as a legal basis to prevent criminal prosecution of both the perpetrator and the victim, considering that they are close in age and generally within four years apart.

    “So, our laws generally are silent on statutory rape and no exemption in our criminal laws provide for that.

    “Even if a crime is presumed to have been committed, which has not been committed in this regard, the law that will be used for these children is our Children and Young Persons Act (CYPA) but we must note that in that particular Act, it is provided that children between the ages of seven and 12 cannot be held criminally responsible unless it can be proven that such children have the capacity i.e. the mental capacity to know that their actions or omissions should not have been carried out in the first place and if they know the implications of such actions.

    Jurisdiction to prosecute

    The Chrisland Schools incident occurred in Dubai. Can Nigerian law enforcement agencies exercise jurisdiction in this case?

    Shonibare does not think so.

    She said: “In this particular case, it happened outside of jurisdiction. There can be some form of jurisdiction for Nigeria, because this case happened with Nigerian citizens and who are guided by Nigerian laws.

    “Now the question is, the incident that happened, is it currently a crime in Nigeria? It is not, so we cannot say that there is some form of jurisdiction. Section 36(8) of the 1999 Constitution essentially says that a person cannot be said to have committed a crime if such act does not constitute a crime at the time it was committed. As it is right now, no Nigerian law has provided that such an act between children, as in this case, is a crime. So, we cannot say that there will be some form of repatriation or anything in this regard, considering that they are children and that act is not criminalised.”

    Negligence claims can be sustained

    The rights activist reasoned that a claim for negligence against the school is possible.

    She said: “What can be done is that there seems to have been negligence on the part of Chrisland Schools, and because of that, the parents of the children can bring an action against the school.

    “Administrative action can also be taken by the Lagos State Government.

    “The issues around pregnancy test carried out without the consent of the parent can also be brought up considering the contact that exists between the parents and children that are going to school.

    “Finally, on the basis that we expect such schools to have policies that address issues like this, the implications or penalties that apply in that regard, should also be invoked in this particular situation.“

    Indiscriminate sharing of porn on social media

    The Chrisland incident gained traction online because of the leaked sex tape.

    Just like the Lagos State Government, Shonibare also has a warning for those sharing the video.

    “When it comes to cases of social media sharing of pornographic or sexual activity, especially as it relates to minors, the Cybercrimes Act is actually quite clear on that. Sections 23 and 24 of the act criminalises the sharing of such kind of videos, especially as it does not serve the interests of the children, both the victims, i.e., the children in this case, and their parents. It is an act that is criminalised. Those who watch or share it are committing a crime based on the Cybercrime Act,“ she said.

    Causes of child-on-child-sexual abuse

    Many experts agree that in the case of child-on-child sexual abuse, minors who have not matured sexually are normally incapable of knowing about specific sex acts without an external source. Thus children who initiate or solicit overtly sexual acts with other children most often have been sexually victimised by an adult beforehand, or by another child who was in turn abused by an adult. In some instances, the perpetrating child may have been exposed to pornography or repeatedly witnessed sexual activity of adults at a very young age.

    Experts also note that children who experience an unwanted sexual approach may not realise that this act was a crime against themselves.

     The National Parent-Teacher Association of Nigeria (NAPTAN) alluded to this with reference to the Chrisland incident.

    Deputy National President of the Association, Adeolu Ogunbanjo said: “Honestly, it is a shame and a very sad one. I have watched the video and from what I saw there, it is as a result of poor parenting, indiscipline and improper counselling on sex education.

    “There is also an administrative deficit, because even though they are children, boys and girls are not supposed to be together in the same hotel room, as seen in the video.”

    How to protect children

    Funmi Falana, National Director of Women Empowerment and Legal Aid (WELA), gave tips on how to protect children.

    She endorsed the Child’s Rights Act “which provides that a child shall have proper guardianship that is in consonance with the culture and moral behaviour applicable in Nigeria. So where a child is not given proper guardianship, the law allows the Ministry of Social Welfare to withdraw the child from the parents and put the child in the government’s custody while the parents will also be monitored pending when the parents will be properly rehabilitated such that they will be able to give proper guardianship.”

    Duty of government, schools

    Editor-in-chief of franktalknow.com, Dr. Olabisi Deji-Folutile, who has a special interest in education and health issues, advised the state and Chrisland schools to set up a council to investigate and make recommendations on how to stop future incidents.

    Deji-Folutile said: “The state could establish a council saddled with the responsibility of performing that responsibility. Such council could be made up of educationists in the public and private sectors, who have a track record of integrity. That way, a seamless process of investigation and punishment is established.

    “In the same vein, there should be well laid-down punishment for erring schools. The sanction could be as stiff as a complete take-over of a school that failed to do due diligence in caring for the children in their care.

    “The schools themselves should have proper rules of engagement. Part of the problem is that some of these elitist schools often relax their rules in order to attract students, hence they tend to overlook deviant behaviours or pretend not to know certain things. They tend to naturally want to cover some evils so that they can continue to keep the students in school. This isn’t strange. Many of them are guided by economic motives. But by the time they know that certain things can end their existence, they are likely to weigh things before covering up for any student.

    “The government can ban children in primary and secondary schools from operating certain social media accounts; schools can do so too. Such a ban would have prevented a situation in which a child could run a social media account with thousands of followers.”

  • NGO empowers women, seeks end to sexual abuse

    A Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO), Exhale Nigeria Imitative, in conjunction with Community Advancement Youth Empowerment Network (CAYEN), has organised a women and girl’s empowerment programme and sexual abuse awareness in the community at Iwaya community in Yaba, Lagos State.

    The event, held at the Redeemers Nursery and Primary School Hall, featured training on baking, shoe making, makeup and gele tying, making of drinks, soap and air freshener making.

    The participants were also trained on financial literacy and business seminars, including how to get business grants, start business with a small capital, as well as save and invest.

    On Saturday, the sexual abuse and awareness campaign held. Participants clad in black top on blue denim met at Iwaya Primary Health Centre Hall. It featured film show- a documentary on rape, seminars, talk on sexual abuse, pledge signing and rally.

    According to the founder, Exhale Nigeria Initiative, Eniola Akinyemi, the empowerment was necessary having realised that a lot of women are idle because they lack the skills and finance to cater for themselves.

    “At the free empowerment, women have been trained to start business with little or no capital. The skills they have learnt is what they can start business in with the resources they use daily and the business can begin in their homes. They will also be able to provide for their homes and they will no longer have time for gossips. The young girls that participated too will be able to assist their parents financially. They will no longer have the time to unnecessarily hang out with boys and the rate of promiscuity will reduce because they have added value to offer and get money rather than offering their body. With this, I hope to achieve a better society,”

    Akinyemi said the campaign was to commemorate the sexual abuse awareness month, let people know it, how to curb the menace, what to do when abused and how to support survivals.

    “Someone abused is already going through psychological trauma, the community must be ready to support anyone that is sexually abused and we want everybody to take a stand against sexual abuse because the act affects not just one person but everybody. We must all support the abuser to get justice and be with them till they are fine.”

    She called for more sensitisation on the act, adding that survivals should be helped. “We all should understand our rights and help others to achieve theirs. Perpetrators should also be well punished and go through psychological counsel to walk them through the process of healing,” she said.

    CAYEN Community Engagement Lead, AderonkeAkinola-Akinwole, said the event was necessary following the rise in unemployment and sexual abuse, especially among women.

    She added: “Women cannot make decisions on their own because they are financially incapacitated. For a woman to be able to take care of herself she has to be financially capable and this can be achieved if she has a skill that can be used to make her money, hence the need for the empowerment. “

    She urged the participants to take the training as an opportunity to learn and invest in themselves. “They are now knowledgeable and equipped and we expect them to start doing something that will yield money for them,” she said.

    She noted that the participants had also being taught how to start small and meet funders.

    The Balogun of Iwaya, Ibrahim Balogun, said the community appreciated the empowerment, describing it as the NGO’s way of giving back to the community that has made them.

    He said the event was good, adding that the participants have a lot to learn. Babafiro of Iwaya, High Chief Gabriel Akinsola, said the participants had a lot to benefit from the programme, noting that the community would now have more entrepreneurs.

     

    “I expect them to use what they have learnt to better their own lives like starting up business and being able to fend for themselves and their family,” he said.

    One of the participants, AwoniyiOpeyemi, said she came for the training to enable her to become self-employed.

    “I learnt how to bake, I intend to be able to bake on my own, sell and make money for myself. This is not the first time the ngo will empower women and girls. About four years ago, I learnt how to make beads and I still make it and make money from it.”

    She thanked the ngo for the free training which has enabled her meet her financial needs at age 14,” she said.

    From fifth right (standing on black top): CAYEN Community Engagement Lead, Aderonke Akinola-Akinwole;  Founder, Exhale Nigeria Initiative, Eniola Akinyemi;  The Balogun of Iwaya, Ibrahim Balogun and Babafiro of Iwaya, High Chief Gabriel Akinsola, at the event.

  • NGO tackles sexual abuse

    It was a fun-filled afternoon, with education and enlightenment on sex last Wednesday, when a Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO), Impact Her Initiative (IHI), hosted students and other young women to a special Valentine treat, with the theme: “Pas A Girl (PAG) this Valentine’.

    The event held at Mabchris Comprehensive College, Surulere in Lagos State.

    The girls had the opportunity to ask questions about sex and other matters arising in that line. They went home with sanitary pads, among other gifts.

    The afternoon also featured talk on feminine hygiene.

    IHI founder, ChiomaUwando, said the event was aimed at educating the girls on sex and to prevent them from teenage pregnancies as well as other societal influences.

    Read also: Our Girls; Election, what election? Stop Sexual Abuse – ‘Do No Harm’

    She urged female youths to pursue their dreams, beautify themselves and be confident in what they do; noting that unprotected sex among youths is a bitter occurrence that is prevalent and should be prevented.

    “During Valentine season, lots of activities happen, such as lovers’ retreat, and lovers’ day. Whenever girls hear the word ‘                Valentine’, they should know that they love themselves before that day. As these young girls are growing and becoming teenagers, they will soon experience puberty, they might be misled by societal influences but that is why this program has been brought up to guide them aright and to impact knowledge in the society.”

    The guest speaker, Lydian John, an actress, urged the girls not to be carried away by what they see, but rather that they should focus on how they want to be seen.

    She added that they should beware of everyone around them and never let themselves be lured into sexual abuse.

    Another speaker, Brenda Nwafor, told the girls how to take care of themselves. She said IHI also enlightens people on self-employment, skills empowerment, how to take good care of their body and become responsible in the society.

    She stressed the need for parents to educate their girls on sex, noting that would make them know everything about it rather than be taught from outside.

     

  • Sexual abuse: R. Kelly released after settling $100,000 bond

    Embattled R&B singer, R. Kelly, on Monday, pleaded not guilty to all 10 charges that he sexually abused four people, including three minors.

    He pleaded not guilty to the charges, in a plea entered by his attorney, Steve Greenberg, at the arraignment hearing before Cook County Associate Judge Lawrence Flood at Leighton Criminal Court, where he appeared in an orange jumpsuit.

    Hours after his arraignment, Kelly, 52, put up the $100,000 bond needed for his release and was spotted leaving Cook County Jail at around 5:30 p.m. local time.

    Many wonder how the singer was able to raise the money, as his finances are currently a “mess”, according to Greenberg.

    The Grammy-winning singer was arrested and charged with aggravated criminal sexual abuse on Friday and spent the weekend behind bars after his bail bond was set for $1 million for which he could put up 10 percent of the total bond required in order to walk free.

    Meanwhile, Michael Avenatti, who is representing two of Kelly’s alleged victims on Monday said he has turned over to prosecutors a second videotape that he claims shows a 14-year-old girl engaged in a sex act with the singer.

    That video is about 55 minutes long and from 1999 or 2000, Avenatti said.

    Kelly’s next court date has been scheduled for March 22. 2019.

  •  Activist challenges women to speak up against sexual abuse

    The President, Women Arise for Change Initiative, Dr. Joe Okei-Odumakin, has challenged women to speak out against injustice, rape and unjust treatment melted to them as that would help bring perpetrators to book.

    Odunmakin spoke at the launch of her debut book- The Magic of Moments of MosunmolaAkiwamide and foundation, MNA Foundation, at Oriental Hotel, Lagos.

    The event kicked off with a welcome dialogue by Olive and XTREME, followed by a “meet the author” session where Olive Emodi had a chat with the author of The Magic of Moments, MosunmolaAkinwamide.

    On the Singlehood Panel were musician/business woman, Sasha P; Sshhh Lingerie founder, Joy Adesanya; actor, WoleOjo; and celebrity consultant & founder of Live Your Dreams Consulting, Bankole Williams. And on the Marriage Panel were actress, MaryjaneUgbaja, author of The Richer Woman and covener of the Do It Afraid conferences, OmilolaOshikoya; and aviation/maritime lawyer, GbengaOshikoya. While on the Abuse Panel were Nigerian women’s rights activist & president of Women Arise for Change Initiative, Dr. Joe Odumakin; the celebrity shrink and psychiatrist-in-chief of Pinnacle Medical Services, Dr. MaymunahKadiri; and internationally acclaimed sexuality education & family life coach, Praise Fowowe.

    In between the panels was a jarring presentation on domestic abuse in Nigeria by Dr. Joe Odumakin. And adding colour and vibe to the event were musical performances by Banke, Mela and Mavin Records’ Johnny Drille; and a spoken word performance by Benny Finisher.

    According toOdumakin over 4, 000 cases of sexual abuse cases have been handled by her organisation in the last few years and prosecution of perpetrators have improved in recent past as more people are breaking the silence.

    She said that ‘rape is oppressive; it is forceful means of possession; and it is evil. Rape has destroyed lives, it has not repaired any, and it has to be stopped.’

    She noted that many promising girls have had their morals destroyed, their confidence conquered, their esteem lowered and their future destabilised, adding that victims would become mothers soon, but the trauma they got from their previous experiences of rape would also affect how they train their children.

    She said: “We will do more in breaking the silence and putting government and other agencies to task on how to addressing the hydra headed monster of rape within our society”.

    She commended the recent efforts by the Lagos state government in designating special courts for sexual violence cases, which according to her, should be emulated by all the states of the federation so that ‘we can sanitise our society from all forms of violence abuses.’

    Odunmakin challenged government at all levels to implement pro-poor policies that will help in addressing the development needs of the people.  ”People are frustrated because of the presence economy situation they have found themselves and they will want to vent their anger at any given opportunities”, she said.

    Psychiatrist-in-chief Pinnacle Medical Services, Dr. MaymunahKadiri called for more psycho-therapy centres for victims of violence  sexual abuse so they can overcome the trauma that the abusers may have taken them through.

    “It is sad that many people who were sexually abuse fall victims of the abuse again and again because there are no guidance and proper rehabilitation for them to live a normal life after they have been abused and battered”, she said.

    She lamented that there are increasingly cases of persons in psychiatric homes across the country are victims of sexual violence abuse.

    She challenged religious and traditional institution to partner with professional psychologists so that proper care and well thought out support can be given to victims of rape and other sexual violence.

    In her words, the author, while speaking about the book said, “I am elated that these two milestones have finally come to reality, and for the tremendous support I have received so far. It is my belief that this book and foundation will contribute to making the world a better place.”

    “The Magic of Moments is a multidimensional book centred on broad relationship themes ranging from the celebration of love to navigating singlehood (finding a partner, the romance phase and settling into a committed partnership) to planning the wedding of your dreams without succumbing to societal pressures. All from the first-hand perspective of a wedding planner and love enthusiast”, she said.

    She noted that the MNA Foundation is a not-for-profit organisation with a mission to provide professional counseling opportunities to victims of abuse, and sexual health support to teenagers in public schools across Africa. And for its first initiative, MNA Foundation has teamed up with the Pad-Up Africa Initiative to educate and empower young teenagers on menstrual health.

  • Boko Haram: UN tasks Nigeria on stigmatisation of girls

    The UN has urged the Nigerian authorities to give more attention to protecting the girls and children, who were victims of sexual violence and abuse by the Boko Haram terrorists.

    Ms Pramila Patten, Special Representative of the Secretary-General on Sexual Violence in Conflict, stated this while briefing on the International Day for the Elimination of Sexual Violence in Conflicts.

    The News Agency of Nigeria  reports that the plight of the girls, who were victims of sexual violence and abuse by Boko Haram terrorists, were among the spotlights for the Day.

    Under this year’s theme, “The Plight and Rights of Children Born of War,” the Day encourages solidarity with the survivors, who have endured multiple ordeals, in the wake of sexual violence.

    A short video clip featured ‘Khadija’, who was kidnapped by Boko Haram terrorists at Banki, Borno and impregnated, being tagged ‘Boko Haram wife’ and her baby, ‘Boko Haram sin’ in the camp.

    Patten recalled her meeting with the victim girls and children born out of rape arising from the sexual violence and abuse when she travelled to Maiduguri in 2017.

    “I met with 200 young girls and there were 162 babies and I was really disturbed by the fact that these young girls and their babies were not only rejected by their families and by their communities but also by the very people they were living with inside the camp.

    My visit to Maiduguri made me realise that more attention needs to be given; I think the focus really has to be on the rights.

    “There’s a convention on the rights of the child that protect these children and more needs to be done,’’ she said.

    According to her, all the girls that she met at the internally displaced people camps in Maiduguri were released from the captivity of Boko Haram.

    She said some of them still had complaints about sexual violence and food, explaining that these were issues that she raised with the government, following her visit to the camp.

    “I raised the issue with the authority, with the Acting President (Yemi Osinbajo), whom I met and who reassured that actions would be taken.’’

    She said government followed up to ensure the review of the administration of the camp.

    She added with further follow up by Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed, the distribution of food was handed over to the World Food Programme to ensure cases of sexual abuse were minimised.

    My office is trying to support the government of Nigeria and other partners and agencies to meet the needs of the very young survivors of sexual violence and their children through access to some kind of livelihoods support.

    That`s in the process of negotiation with Nigeria.’’

    UN Secretary-General, Antonio Guterres, said the effects of conflict-related sexual violence echoes across generations, in the form of trauma, stigma and unwanted pregnancy.

    The UN chief described the scourge as “a threat to our collective security’’ and “a stain on our common humanity.’’

    “Children conceived through wartime rape often struggle with issues of identity and belonging for decades after the guns have fallen silent.

    “They may be left in a legal limbo or at risk of becoming stateless.

    Read Also: Emulate Christ, girls told

    “They are vulnerable to recruitment, trafficking and exploitation, with broad implications for peace and security as well as human rights.

    “Their mothers may be marginalised and shunned by their own families and communities.

    “These women and children are sometimes seen as affiliates of armed and violent extremist groups, rather than as victims and survivors,’’ Guterres said.

    Lord Ahmad, the British Prime Minister’s Special Representative on Preventing Sexual Violence in Conflict and Minister of State for the Commonwealth and the United Nations, also condemned Boko Haram terrorists’ activities against girls.

    “Female illiteracy in some countries is running at 60, 70 or 80 per cent and there are bigoted fanatics, who actually campaign to stop girls from going to school, including the numbskulls from Boko Haram who will raid schools, abduct children and inflict any atrocity in order to deny girls an education.

    “As recently as February, Boko Haram kidnapped 110 girls from a school in Dapchi and we all remember how 276 were taken from Chibok in 2014.

    “When I visited Borno last year, I met girls who had been told they would be shot if they dared learn to read, as the Taliban shot Malala,’’ Ahmad said.

    Similarly, Ms Ninette Kelley, Director of UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) in New York, while launching the UNHCR’s Global Trends Report, urged governments to ensure voluntary return of IDPs to their communities.

    She added that no displaced person should be forced to return until certain factors are considered.

  • SEXUAL ABUSE: Men molested by women speak out

    While more attention has been paid to the girl-child and the attendant sexual abuse over-time, Dorcas Egede in this piece, reports on the under-reported yet steadily growing cases of sexual abuse of the boy-child. She spoke with several adults who recounted their sexual abuse as boys.

    IT was the coordinator, Lagos State Domestic and Sexual Violence Response Team (DSVRT), Lola Vivour-Adeniyi, who recently sounded the warning that even as the world continues the “advocacy around the girl-child, we must not forget the boy-child, because statistics have shown that these same boys grow up to be abusers. We have to strike the balance by advocating for the boy-child the way we advocate for the girl-child.”

    Vivour-Adeniyi is not alone. Dayo Adeyemi founder and team lead of Catalyst Men Network, also cautioned in a recent interview with The Nation that the boy-child has for long been neglected just the same way we once neglected the girl-child, arguing that  “we are also going to lose the boy-child. And by the time the boy-child would wake up, there is going to be a brutal boomerang.”

    CEO of Mind Resurgence Company, Matthew Femi-Adedoyin likes to describe himself as, “first, a husband and a father, a family life coach, a sex recovery consultant and a child psychologist.”He is also of the opinion that society must strike a balance in the fight against sexual abuse of minors. Speaking with The Nation on Sunday, he shared his tale of sexual abuse as a child and how he came out a better man.

    According to him, “We live in a society where a part of the society is unfair to the girl-child and a part of the society is unfair to the boy-child. And because there are a lot of empowerment organisations for the girl-child, they forget the boy-child; and the question I always ask is, if you empower this girl-child, who will marry her in the future? Is it not the disempowered boy-child?

    Abused at four

    Recalled Femi-Adedoyin, his childhood was stolen from him, when at the tender age of four, he began to be abused by a neighbor, a certain aunty. “She must have been around 18 or above, way older than me. In the name of helping my mum take care of me, she began sexually abusing me. In the bathroom, she would ask me to put my mouth on her breast and she would fondle my penis. The abuse continued undetected until we moved out of the compound.” The lady sealed his lips with threats to kill him and his parents if he dared speak out.

    Moving from the old house however, didn’t guarantee Femi-Adedoyin’s freedom from sexual abuse. At his grandmother’s place, where he was taken to, a girl his age used him to practise what she saw her parents do at night. “We didn’t actually have penetration, we were caught while we were trying to do all that, but instead of them (the adults) to rebuke us, they started calling us husband and wife.”

    By the time he got into secondary school, though he had “started preaching everywhere, in the bus, on the street, in classrooms,” but his sexual urges were already active and alive. He soon met someone older and the abuse continued. “I met a school mother who liked me, played with me, gave me money and took me to her house. Soon, we became very close and one day she innocently kissed me. But because I had been involved in series of abuses in the past, the innocent kiss became a passionate one. Unfortunately, she too had been a victim of series of abuse, so two victims of abuse met, got their urges rekindled and one day, they had sex. She was 18 and he was 12.

    “She passed out of my school but didn’t gain admission immediately, so the sex continued in her house for the next three years. On the third year, she gained admission, and it was then at 15, with nobody to perpetrate the act with, that I realised I had become addicted.”

    By the time he got into the university, he had slept with several girls, became ardent at masturbating and done pornography. But a time came in his life when he knew he “needed a change of mindset. One day, I met someone that gave me a book, “The psychology of sex”. After reading the book, I saw a step-by-step approach on how to break free. I started following the steps, and in six months, I could do without sex, masturbation and pornography. That was when I knew I had started breaking free. I abstained for six months, one year, two years, and I started helping people without tools. Sometimes it took up to a year or more before the person broke free. So, when I saw that there are schools that can help me become better, I applied to an online school to become a certified sex therapist. Now, in two weeks or less, I can help somebody break free. I have since been gathering certifications on sex therapy, family life, and child psychology.”

    Samuel Johnson (not real name) is another victim who narrated his story. He “was seven or eight, when the abuses started, the abuser was a neighbour, who made out to be the caring aunty who always wanted me to be with her. She was a trusted person, someone in whose care my parents could leave me for as long as they wished. She was about 17 at the time.”

    Asked what form the abuse took, the young man hesitated a while before saying, “She went as far as everything you can imagine about sex. It wasn’t that it was close, this was really sexual abuse.”

    Johnson had other abusers apart from the ‘caring’ neighbour. “There was this lady in my uncle’s place. I used to go there for holidays. She was a neighbour to my uncle, and she took a liking to me. Hers started when she began undressing in my presence. You can imagine a matured lady undressing before me, me who had already been exposed to sexuality before then. And then another round of abuse started. This happened every damn holiday, and continued for many years. I was about age 13 and she was around 26.”

    The turning point for Johnson came when he was about age 18. He believes strongly that his freedom from sexual depravity was divine. “You know when you’re becoming 17-19, sometimes it’s always difficult to break-off. The break-off for me started when I was 17. I got committed in church, and it became clear to me that I couldn’t continue in the addiction. The realities of life began to dawn on me and the word of God I’d heard all those years began to make sense to me. It was at this point my freedom from the effect of sexual abuse began. For me, my saving grace was my belief in God. It was God that helped me.”

    Speaking further on the reality of sexual abuse against the boy-child, Femi-Adedoyin said, “I have had many males come to me for help to break addictions in masturbation and pornography, and they were introduced to these vices as children. There’s one boy I will never forget. I met him when he was in SS2. He shared his boyhood story of how an uncle in the compound he lived serially invited children into his room and slotted pornography videos for them to watch. After that, he would ask the children to practice what they had watched, boy to girl. He usually blackmailed them with threats of shutting them out of his room, and stuffs like he would not give them money.

    “Why did this boy open up? We went to their school to teach sexuality education for one month. At the end of our session, we told them to write down a secret they had never shared with anyone. We asked them not to write their names on the paper to make them know their secret was safe. So, he was able to bare his mind. That’s to let you know that as we are talking, a boy-child is suffering sexual abuse.”

    Demystifying the myth

    For many years, issues of sexual abuse of minors was like a taboo and hardly discussed, whether openly or secretly. Mothers whose husbands were abusing their daughters found it difficult to speak up, parents whose daughters were abused by neighbours, teachers, or even pastors, quietly swept these issues under the carpet. It was unheard of to speak of such shameful acts in public.

    Things are however changing, with many sensitisations being carried out by government and non-governmental organisations. There is now an increased awareness that sexual abuse of minors is a vice that must be stopped short. More worrisome is the apparent neglect of the boy-child, partly because the society hardly look his way when sexual abuse is the topic. As a result, a lot of people are yet to awaken to the reality of this  vice. Even the media is complicit and guilty of under-reporting it.

    Silence culture fueling sexual abuse of boy-child

    It is commonly believed that men don’t talk and they don’t express emotions, so as not to be perceived as weaklings. Boys too tend to be quite like their adult counterpart, though sometimes out of fear and other reasons ranging from a desire to keep enjoying gratifications that come from the abuser or because they don’t feel free enough to discuss sexual issues with their parents or other responsible adults around them. Inevitably, this fuels the abuse and eventually wrecks the child.

    Reacting to this, Adeyemi said, “The greatest fear of any woman is the fear of rejection, while the greatest fear of any man is the fear of shame. Men hate not to be seen as courageous. Anything that brings shame to us, we try to run away because we don’t want shame. Moreover, there’s a functional masculinity that sees men as very strong. Today, I can tell you men can be physically very strong, mentally productive, but an emotional wreck. But society has taught him never to cry. And so the man whose emotion is on motion is stultified, because his daddy has told him big boys don’t cry.

    “If something happens to a boy, he is unable to express his emotions because his parents shut him down with words like, ‘are you not a man? Stop behaving like a woman.’ And that codification has been knocked into the subconscious of the boy-child.

    Femi-Adedoyin believes that the culture of silence has been put upon the male specie by the society. “Our society has taught people that boys should not cry, should not show emotions, so the boy is dying inside and is forming macho. When a boy is crying, you hear people rebuke him for behaving like a woman. We are the ones forming a culture of silence in the boy child, even as we encourage the girl child to speak out. I think our society will do well by not telling the boy child to be a man and not to show emotions.”

     

    Parents negligence and lack of communication, major factors

    Parents have a huge role to play in protecting the boy-child from sexual abuse. All the sources that spoke to Sunday Nation, maintained that communicating with your children is very key in protecting them from sexual predators. According to Dr A. O. Coker, a clinical psychologist and consultant psychiatrist at the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH), “In a good home, if you train your daughter well, and an uncle tries to abuse her, the girl will report the uncle there and then. So, girls that come from very good family background most likely would report an abuse. Girls and boys that cannot actually communicate with their parents would find it difficult to report to their parents that an uncle is sexually abusing them, and then the abuse continues. And it could go on forever until they are caught.”

    Just as is being done with the girl-child, Dr Coker says “get closer to your son, educate him that when an older person touches your private parts, report to us. Fortunately, it’s getting better now. I communicate with my children, but our parents did not. Parents should communicate with their children so that children can be their friends.”

    Femi-Adedoyin on his part believes that abuse is made possible when parents are absent and not fully involved in the lives of their children. “I had absentee parents who left the house when we were yet to wake up and didn’t return until we had gone to bed. They were not available to even talk to. My parents’ absence, their being too hard on us and our fear of them made the abuse possible.”

    His advice to parents is that “Children need their presence more than their presents. There are four ways you can abuse children – verbal abuse, sexual abuse, emotional abuse and abuse by negligence. Most parents abuse their children by negligence.”

    Johnson, who like Femi-Adedoyin revealed that his parents knew nothing of the sexual abuses he suffered as a child, has this counsel for parents, “Don’t trust people so much, especially with your children, whether male or female. People tend to talk more about protecting the female child, but the male child also needs protecting. It could be your maid or that neighbour that you need to protect your children from.” Additionally, he advised parents to demystify sex for their children by giving them proper sex education.

    Parents must also know the signs to look out for. Adeyemi says your child may have been sexually abused when he has nightmares or other sleep problems without an explanation, seems distracted or distant at odd times, and has a sudden change in eating habits; sudden mood swings, rage, fear, insecurity or withdrawal and keeps secrets, or leaves “clues” that seem likely to provoke a discussion about sexual issues… refuses to talk about a secret shared with an adult or older child, suddenly has money or starts to steal money, exhibits adult-like sexual behaviours, language and knowledge, asks other children to behave sexually or plays sexual games, mimics adult-like sexual behaviours.”

    Send pedophiles to the psychiatrists not prisons

    Coker believes pedophilia should not be criminalised and that punitive measures don’t work for pedophiles. “They should be sent to the psychiatrist or the psychologist. Punitive measures don’t even cure this thing. They should be rehabilitated. His argument is that an adult that “decides to talk to an underage girl does so because he hasn’t got enough self-confidence to approach an adult lady. He would prefer to talk to the young ones that he can use material things to attract.

    “Pedophilia is actually classified as a mental disorder. It is more of a psychological disorder than a criminal case. That’s why you see a teacher abusing his pupil or a pastor abusing some children in the church, or a father having an incest relationship with the daughter. They need psychological help.”

    Instead of sending pedophiles to prison where they will go and “acquire more skills” to further perpetrate their vice, Coker advocates that they be treated as mental cases and rehabilitated.

    Stemming the tide

    All parties spoken to agreed that it is a task that requires all hands to be on deck – be it the family, the school, the church and even the media. According to Coker, “There has to be continuous public education, awareness, advocacy and enlightenment programmes for parents to educate their children. If somebody is trying to touch your breast or trying to be overfamiliar with you, come and tell me. The child must also know that there will be some advances from adults.

    “I think there’s a lot of public awareness and advocacy that needs to take place, and that is where NGOs must come in. Community leaders must talk about it, spiritual leaders must talk about it in churches and mosques. For example, if the General Overseer that speaks to up to 3million people at a camp meeting can talk about it, that will have a lot of mileage. NGOs too must keep on making a lot of noise about it. We need to go to primary and secondary schools to tell the boys that this is happening and if it has happened to you, go and report.”

    In Adeyemi’s opinion, “Anything that is sensational sells with the media. If we are able to get a story of a dog that had sex with a man, it’s going to blow; but if you say a boy of 16 is raped by a woman of 36, before you know it, people begin to say he enjoyed it. We have been wired to believe that sex is not mutual, the man enjoys sex. So, when it comes to sex education, we are preparing our curriculum and media along that line, along sensation. How do you feel when it is reported that a man of 52 rapes a girl of seven? It sells the newspapers.

    “NGOs, the society, the media, and the government must, as a matter of urgency, put up a comprehensive curriculum that deals with the non-academic side of education; number one, anger management. I have never seen any university where they are taught anger management  but this hidden anger is what propels either a man to beat his wife to death or a woman to commit an abusive behaviour.

    “So, how do we create awareness? We all must come together on board. Getting support for the boy-child project is a herculean task. In creating awareness, we all need to jointly work together. Organisations must also put in money for the boy-child project, because if we don’t raise the boy-child, tomorrow, one Evans who is a kidnapper or one Vampire in the East will kill 200 people. Most of the people we see in government today is a function of boys not well raised, who turned out to be leaders. If you cannot go out and get this done, please support organisations like ours, focused on transforming the boy-child, so that the girl-child, the family and the society can have peace.

     

     

    Boy child abuse: A potential time-bomb

    Sexual Violence Response Team (DSVRT), using inmates in Ikoyi Prisons and Kirikiri Prisons, incarcerated for sexual molestation and child abuse, as samples, revealed that many of them suffered sexual violations as young children.

    ‘The data gathered through analysis from semi-structured interviews and questionnaires from 131 male sex offenders with participants aged 18 and above drawn from different local government areas of Lagos State, revealed that 80.9 percent of inmates were abused as a child, an indication that they had become sexually active at an early age. The data further shows that some inmates lost their virginity to family members and older acquaintances who took advantage of them during their early teenage years.’

    Reacting to this finding, Femi-Adedoyin, recalled when he almost indulged in sexual abuse of a minor. “It is very possible. I was almost becoming an abuser too. I remember a scenario, which is one of the things I truly regret till date. What helped me not to abuse that girl was church mindset.  There was this beautiful little girl In my compound, who called me uncle. One day on the staircase, I put her on my lap and started touching her nipples, she didn’t have breasts. It suddenly occurred to me that this was wrong, so I stood her up and sent her away. That was the only time, but if not that I was a church boy and God was changing me, I would have become a serial abuser by now, maybe a rapist, because an abused child has the tendency of abusing someone else.”

    Johnson, however does not believe that the abused-abuser factor applies to every victim of sexual abuse. “No. this is not the case always. As an individual, I later understood what abuse was, and knew where to draw the line. The major thing sexual abuse did to me was that it made me attracted to older ladies and fearless to approach them.”

    Even experts have varying thoughts on the abused-abuser theory. Adeyemi, while stating that there is no scientific backing to whether someone who suffered abused as a child would grow up an abuser, noted, “However, the psychological part of it is this: whatever you have undergone, especially when it’s ingrained in your subconscious, could become your way of life. It’s like the girl-child whose mother is unduly wicked to her. She’s also going to grow up believing that wickedness, being harsh and extremely strict is the way of motherhood. The same thing applies in what we call behavioural cycle. If you’re abused or sexually violated, you’re likely going to see it as normal. There’s what we call the Oedipus subconscious. Human memory is never wiped off; you only need something to trigger it.”

    Not a one-way thing

    Dr A. O. Coker, a clinical psychologist and consultant psychiatrist at the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LASUTH) completely negated the abused-abuser theory. “You mean someone that was abused by a pedophile now grows up, and you think he will be abusing minors? It’s not done. It doesn’t happen like that. I mean, if me, a young man was abused at the age of four by a woman who is 34, do you think I will grow up and begin abusing minors? It’s not a one way thing.”

    He believes that “girls usually make themselves available to pedophiles, because pedophiles offer them chocolates and money and they enjoy the company of the pedophile. It is when they are caught that the girl now realises that she was actually being abused.”

    Speaking about the way men perceive sexual violations, Coker said, “Men basically don’t see it as trauma; they enjoy it. Boys that are being abused by older women enjoy it. It’s the same thing I said about the girls who suffer abuse by older men, they enjoy it. Boys also enjoy it because they benefit from the older women. So, both companies enjoy it.

  • Lagos rescues teenager from sexual abuse

    Lagos rescues teenager from sexual abuse

    Officials of the Child Protection Unit of Lagos State Ministry of Youth and Social Development have rescued a 14-year-old girl identified simply as Favour from sexual abuse in the hands of her Uncle.

    A statement signed by the Head of Public Affairs of the ministry, Mrs Olabisi Adeola said the teenager was rescued at Shasha- Akowonjo in Alimosho Local Government Area.

    Her rescued came as a result of reports from an anonymous source who informed the Child Protection Unit’s hotline to inform government on illicit acts observed at Block 2, Flat 9, Millennium Estate, Afonka, Shasha where Favour resides with her cousin, Mrs. Eze Kelechi and the younger brother to Eze’s husband, Nelson.

    Favour said she had been subjected to series of sexual abuse by Nelson since Eze had accommodation issues after she separated with her husband in December 2015 and chose the option of moving into a two bedroom apartment occupied by Nelson, pending the time she will resolve issues on accommodation.

    She said the first time she was abused was in October 2015, when Nelson pushed her to the bed, while she struggled with him, but her strength was never a match to that of Nelson, who warned her never to report the incident to Eze (her cousin).

    The statement reads: ‘’Subsequently, Nelson continued the act as he was enjoying it, to the extent that he drugs drinks for her and Eze’s children to fall asleep. At times, she would wake up to find herself naked without knowing what transpired.

    ‘’The indecent act continued till June 2017 she discovered a stop in her monthly flow and reported to Nelson who did not deny being responsible. He decided to get drugs to abort the pregnancy, but was prevented following a scan that revealed she was three months pregnant.

    ‘’The matter was later reported to the Shasha Police Division, where the case was interrupted due to family pressure, mandating Nelson to take full responsibility and custody of Favour. These did not stop Nelson from further having sex with her, claiming the intercourse is on the basis of helping her enlarge her pelvic during labour.’’

    The Lagos State Government has taken custody of the girl for protection and care pending conclusion of investigations ongoing by the police and the state government.

    It will be recalled that earlier this year, the Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Youth and Social Development, Mr. Hakeem Muri-Okunola had warned that perpetrators of child abuse of any kind will not be spared but severely punished.

  • Sexual abuse: U.S. gymnastics team doctor pleads guilty

    Sexual abuse: U.S. gymnastics team doctor pleads guilty

    Former team doctor of U.S. gymnastics team on Wednesday pleaded guilty in a Michigan Court to sexual abuse on seven athletes during medical exams, local media reported.

    Larry Nassar pleaded guilty to seven counts of first-degree criminal sexual conduct, the Indianapolis Star newspaper reported.

    The plea was part of agreement with prosecutors that would see him sentenced to between 25 and 40 years in prison.

    He is to be sentenced in January.

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    The newspaper first revealed ongoing abuse against gymnasts.

    More than 130 women and girls, including multiple members of the U.S. Olympic team had earlier accused Nassar of abuse.

    Gold medalist Gabby Douglas was the latest gymnast to come forward to say that like several of her teammates, including McKayla Maroney and Aly Raisman, she was abused by Nassar.

    “We admire the strength shown by Gabby and her teammates in speaking out publicly to hold a predator accountable.

    “The conduct of which Larry Nassar is accused is appalling, and we are very sorry that any athlete has been harmed during her or his gymnastics career,’’ U.S. Gymnastics, the sport’s governing body, said.

    The head of U.S. Gymnastics resigned earlier this year amid sexual misconduct accusations against adults working in the organisation’s youth gymnastics programmes.