Tag: Victims

  • Air Force names crash victims

    Air Force names crash victims

    •Govt condole with families

    The victims of the Nigerian Air Force plane which crashed on Saturday into a residential quarter at Ribadu Cantonment in Kaduna,have been named.

    They are: Squadron Leader Adekunle Suara (pilot), wife of Wing Commander N. Hassan, wife of Wing Commander I. B. Musa, Warrant Officer Etim and Air Craft Woman Naomi Adekunle.

    The ill-fated aircraft was Abuja-bound.

    Squadron Leader Suara is survived by a young wife, who got married to him last year.

    According to a statement by the Director of Defence Information, Col. Rabe Abubakar, President  Muhammadu Buhari  described the crash as colossal loss not only to the families but to the nation

    “The President spoke through the Permanent Secretary Ministry of Defence, Alhaji Aliyu Ismaila, who was also the head of Federal Government delegation that visited the site of the crash and the families of the victims.

    “The President extends his condolences on behalf of the Federal Government and the good people of Nigeria over the unfortunate loss of the officers and men whom he described as gentlemen and intelligent personnel whose loss could not be quantified especially now that their services are much-needed.

    “The President prayed for the repose of their souls and also prayed Almighty God to grant the families the fortitude to bear the irreplaceable loss.

    ” Chief of Defence Staff (CDS), General Abayomi Gabriel Olonisakin, who was also in the Presidential entourage, condoled with the families on behalf of the Armed Forces and described the late officers as fine, loyal and patriotic gentlemen who died gallantly while serving their fatherland.

    He said: “Though you are gone, your memories will be with us for a very long time to come”.

    A Nigerian Air Force (NAF) Dornier-228 aircraft, with call sign NAF030, crashed into a house at Ribadu Cantonment, Kaduna shortly after take-off.

    The highlight of the condolence visit was the observance of a one-minute silence in honour of the departed colleagues and visits to the individual families of the victims.

    Some of those on the entourage were the GOC 1 Division, Maj Gen Adeniyi Oyebade, Air Officer Commanding, Training Command, Kaduna, AVM Alkali Mamu, Commandant, Nigerian Defence Academy, Maj Gen MT Ibrahim, Chief of Defence Communications, Defence Headquarters and other senior officers on the entourage of the Federal Government delegation.

    The owner of the house on which the chopper crashed, Lt. Col. Grema, narrated how he escaped death.

    He told the delegation that: “I came out of my house few minutes before the aircraft fell on my bore hole.  I had not quite shut the door to my house when I heard the noise arising from the crash.”

    As at the time of the visit, condolence registers had been opened in the victim’s houses, while some family members were still in shock. The young wife of the deceased pilot, thanked the delegation.

    Wing Commander Musa and Hassan said the visit by the top brass team had given them encouragement and courage to raise the children their wives left. They pledged  their unrelenting effort to move the NAF and the Nigeria military forward.

    Speaking with reporters after inspecting the scene of the crash, the Permanent Secretary said: “We have lost very able officers and their families and we want to on behalf of the Federal Government extend our condolences to all of them and pray for the repose of their souls.

    “With the passion and zeal the president came in with, you will appreciate that he is doing everything possible to address some of these challenges of security in the country. The Nigerian Army, Air force and Navy are all one and he is doing all his best to reposition them to meet global standards.”

    He appealed to Nigerians to give Buhari the needed support to move the country forward, saying: “This incident is something that is from God and we should accept it as such, all we can do is pray that when our time come, we die in peace.”

    Wife of Wing Commander Hassan left behind four young kids, the eldest is not up to 10. As at the time of the visit, the children were busy playing around the compound.

  • Yobe flood victims get succour

    The lawmaker representing Yobe South, Senator Muhammad Hassan, has donated relief materials and cash worth N2million to flood victims at Ngelzarma in Fune Local Government Area of Yobe State.

    The items are bags of rice, millet, guinea corn, salt, sugar, cartons of milk, vegetable oil, palm oil, bags of beans and cartons of spaggetti.

    Others items include blankets, mattresses, mats, wrappers, cotton yards, kitchen plates, cups and clothing materials.

    The presentation was done under tight security at the palace of the emir of Ngelzarma and other community leaders.

    Senator Hassan told reporters that he was sad by the havoc caused by the flood, saying the people could not be neglected by their representatives in the government, hence his visit to present a token to ameliorate their suffering.

    His words: “It was a very sad event that happened in Ngelzarman and other towns. This was as a result of the flood disaster, which affected many houses. Many buildings collapsed. It was really sad.”

  • IGP tells doctors to assist accident victims, others

    IGP tells doctors to assist accident victims, others

    The Inspector-General of Police, Solomon Arase, has urged medical personnel and members of the public to attend to accident victims and persons with gunshot injuries.

    He, however, noted that the police should be informed for necessary action after attending to them.

    He explained that the call is necessary due to neglects and untimely death of victims following  fear of being implicated without police involvement.

    The Police High Command also ordered its officers not to harass good Samaritans in this regard, but endeavour to elicit correct facts in relation to incidents from them.

    This is contained in a statement issued yesterday by the Force spokesman, Emmanuel Ojukwu.

    The statement reads: “Doctors on duty are equally duty bound to treat victims of gunshot wounds and further inform police of relevant facts.The safety of Nigerians is a collaborative effort of all and sundry.

    “Police, therefore, enjoin citizens not to relent in their cooperative attitude in ensuring safety of all. While they are also to report any suspicious person or persons to the nearest police station”.

  • 1,959 flood victims in Akwa Ibom get N50,000 each

    Akwa Ibom State government has provided financial assistance to 1,959 flood victims in Eket and Uyo, according to Mrs Sylvia Ekpo, Permanent Secretary, Deputy Governor’s Office.

    Ekpo told reporters yesterday in Uyo that individuals not families benefitted from the financial assistance.

    She said that each of the 1,959 victims received N50,000.

    “The beneficiaries are those who made official reports to our office.

    “The day after the flood, I and my boss went to the spot to assess the situation.

    “In Eket we captured 1,670 names, while in Uyo we had 289 victims,’’ she said.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), recalled that the flood was caused by torrential rainfall which occurred on June 29 that lasted for several hours.

    Ekpo explained that victims, who reported their cases to the State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) were the people eligible to benefit from the largesse.

    “The government decided that instead of giving the victims relief materials, we should give them financial assistance,’’ she said.

    She said that officials of SEMA visited the affected areas to assess the situation before capturing the victims that qualified for the assistance.

  • Council to evacuate flood victims

    Ten thousand people are to be evacuated from 20 flood-prone communities in Wurno Local Government Area of Sokoto State.

    The Caretaker Chairman of the council, Alhaji Shehu Chacho, who addressed reporters yesterday in Wurno, the local government headquarters, said the affected communities included Gidan-Kamba, Gidan-Bango one and two, ‘Yar-Wurnoni, Gidan-Modu, Lahodu, Tunga, Barayara Zaki, Arba, Koliyal, among others.

    He said a meeting was convened to discuss the planned release of excess water from the Goronyo dam by the Sokoto Rima River Basin Development Authority (SRBDA).

    According to him, the need to evacuate residents was a proactive measure to minimise destruction, adding: “The people in these communities have to be evacuated to primary schools, government quarters and other government buildings.

    “This action becomes necessary to prevent the loss of lives and property.”

  • Boko Haram: Victims Support Fund signs N60m MoU with three hospitals in Borno, Yobe

    The Nigerian Foundation for the Support of Victims of Terrorism,otherwise called Victims Support Fund (VSF), has signed a memorandum of understanding with three hospitals for the treatment and care of victims of terror in Borno and Yobe states.

    The MoU, which was signed at separate times within the week by the Executive Director of the Foundation, Prof. Sunday Abogonye Ochoche, in Maiduguri and Damaturu, also gave a cheque of N20 million each to the three hospitals.

    The beneficiary hospitals include the Borno State Specialist Hospital Maiduguri, the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital and the Gen. Sani Abatcha Specialist Hospital, Damaturu in Yobe State.

    Ochoche at separate signing ceremonies in Maiduguri and Damaturu, urged the management of the hospitals to use the funds judiciously for the care of victims of terror attacks in the states.

    He said the desire of the VSF is to make sure that all the hospitals are assisted to perform at their minimum best in taking care of victims of terror attacks.

    He said: “We at the Victims Support Funds are aware that we cannot meet all the challenges that your hospitals face in the treatment of victims of terror attacks. However, the presentation that we are making is to assist you in delivering better services to victims of terror attacks who are usually brought to your hospitals.

    “We are aware that over time, when these attacks occur, your facilities are over-stretched and therefore this kind of support is crucial for the provision of equipment, drugs and facilitates for improved service delivery to the victims.”

    He described the donations as just a small element of the good things that are in stock for the victims of Boko Haram attacks, adding that the foundation’s attention at the moment is geared towards the rehabilitation of women and the provision of good and sustainable education for the orphans of insurgency.

    He also announced that seven hospitals are benefitting from the programme with majority coming from the North East, comprising Borno, Yobe, Gombe and Adamawa in the first phase while the second phase will comprise Taraba, Bauchi and Plateau states.

    Dr. Abdulrahaman Tahir, the Chief Medical Director of UMTH; Dr. Salisu Kwaya Kura of the Borno Specialist Hospital and Dr. Garba Musa Fika all signed the MoU on behalf of their hospitals. They all promised to use the funds for the purpose it was meant for.

  • Police recover remains of Bayelsa pipeline explosion victims

    Police recover remains of Bayelsa pipeline explosion victims

    The Police in Bayelsa State said yesterday that they have recovered the remains of victims of Thursday’s crude oil pipeline explosion which occurred in Agip’s field in the state.

    Twelve people died in the explosion which occurred while Agip staff were carrying out routine maintenance on Tebidaba-Clough line, in Southern Ijaw Local Government Area of the state.

    Two persons are still missing according to the police.

    Spokesman for the State Police Command, Mr Asinim Butswat, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Yenagoa that search and rescue efforts for the missing persons had been activated, but yet to yield any result.

    He said: “twelve persons were burnt beyond recognition, which included a soldier on guard duty amongst others.

    “Four persons were rescued alive and are undergoing treatment, while two persons are still missing. Search for the missing persons is ongoing,” Butswat said.

  • Succour for Boko Haram victims

    Succour for Boko Haram victims

    SUCCOUR came the way of victims of Boko Haram insurgents who received some relief materials from Vitafoam Nigeria Plc. The company, in fulfillment of its Corporate Social Responsibilities (CSR), donated 100 mattresses and 100 pillows to the Internally Displaced People (IDPs) in Borno State through an Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO), The Oasis Association.
    Speaking during the donation held at the Borno State Liaison Office on Victoria Island, Lagos, the Group Managing Director, Vitafoam Nigeria Plc, Mr Taiwo Adeniyi, said the gesture was a token to make life more meaningful for those displaced by the insurgents and alleviate their sufferings.
    He noted that the donation was particularly for the victims in Borno State, which he described as Vitafoam’s way of giving back to the society.
    He said that Oasis contacted Vitafoam to partner them by assisting in this regard. “We believe that we are just contributing our part. We have been supporting the victims of many disasters over the years and we have consistently spent millions of Naira annually.”
    He said that for any human being to think of doing anything in life, the first step is to have a place to rest and that is why mattresses and pillows are very symbolic. He added that the significance of the donation is better appreciated against the essence of comfortable sleep as a necessary condition for thinking better.
    Adeniyi noted that the company has being highly involved in the area of CSR because the company is a good corporate citizen. “We have been of help during the crisis of flood in Nigeria, during health challenges and other series of circumstance that threatened human lives. Today is a consonance to our policy in ensuring that human being live a worthy life.
    “On annual basis, we spend an average of 100 million on CSR and we would continue to support people that have challenges,” he said.
    Adeniyi who pledged the firm’s continual support to the needy as good corporate citizens, noted that Vitafoam’s operations in the Northern part was affected by the activities of Boko Haram thus leading to some loss of revenues. “But then, the government could not address the level of destruction caused by the insurgents alone because the damages are so much. Other corporate bodies therefore have an obligation to to assist the Internally Displaced People without further delay. This is why Vitafoam has been involved by today’s donation.
    While he thanked Borno State government for giving Vitafoam the opportunity to assist the victims, Adeniyi assured the shareholders of increased value saying that all the company’s activities are aimed at increasing shareholder value ultimately.
    The President, The Oasis Association, Air Vice Marshal Olufemi Soewu (rtd) said that the NGO comprises of professionals from various backgrounds driven by selfless desire to assist humanity. “We are driven by the desire to help humanity and not for any material gain. Our material benefit is spiritual. We believe that whatsoever we do would be rewarded by God and that has being our driving force,” he said.
    According to him, the NGO has being involved in diverse disaster internetions in the past. ”We have supported victims of bumb explosion at the Ikeja cantonment in Lagos some years ago and annually, we design a specific programme that we want to focus on to render assistance.
    “Last year, our focus was on health. We assisted victims of tuberculosis, hepataitis and other related ailments. This year, the focus is on internally displaced people,” he said.
    Soewu commended Vitafoam’s management for the quick response to the request to assist victims of the insurgency in Borno State.
    He pledged the NGO’s commitment to ensure that human beings are supported whenever there is crisis.
    The Head, Borno State Liason Office, Lagos, Mrs Racheal Dunama-Balami, who recieved the items donated on behalf of the Boko Haram victims in Borno State, thanked the management of Vitafoam and Oasis for the wonderful support, saying it has confirmed that we are all our brothers keepers. She promised to deliver the items to Borno State government.

  • PAINS OF  INCEST VICTIMS

    PAINS OF INCEST VICTIMS

    Citing a plethora of cases of incestuous abuses, Medinat Kanabe reviews the horrible effects of incest on victims, while also exploring the signs and effectiveness of the legal system.

    Little Matilda (not real name) was eight when she was sexually abused by her uncle. Following that experience, she became sexually wild and began experimenting on her own, initiating her friends at school to sex in the process. She was sleeping with boys and girls alike in school, and even with her brother at home. Often when she slept with her brother, she called on her younger ones to come watch. Due to no fault of hers, little Matilda thus transformed into more or less a time bomb and a bad influence on her immediate communities, having  lost her innocence at a very tender age.

    The above is a typical scenario of possible evil consequences of incest and other sexual abuses on a child.

    Take the case of another girl-child victim, Shola (not real name). Shola’s father gave his brother the go ahead to sleep with her and in turn collected money from him. When the uncle travelled, her father took over and continued sleeping with her. This continued perpetually, and before Shola clocked 18, she had undergone seven abortions for both her uncle and her father.

    In both cases as narrated by Mrs. Itoro Eze-Anaba, managing partner, Partnership for Justice and CEO, Mirabel Centre, help did come the way of the victims from her organisation; but not before grievous damages had been done.

    For this reason, she advised parents not to be judgemental or blame their children when such abuses happens and said they should instead put in prevention measures.

    “Tell your children the names of their body parts, so that when something happens, they can tell you what really happened to them – not that they will call it a name that people will not understand. We have had a client that her uncle was touching her vagina and when she was brought in, she was calling the vagina a name that I have not heard before.

    “Teach the boy-child sex education too because they believe that they are entitled to taking things by force. Show good example to your child. If a father does not respect his wife at home, it will tell on his male child.”

    She also said people can know if their children are going through sexual abuse when they suddenly change.

    “She may become withdrawn, if she ordinarily was chatty. She may start bedwetting, sucking her thumb, or starts acting adult. When your husband becomes too close to her, buys her gifts, selects her from the group, calls her special names, or when the girl starts to be withdrawn from him, or feel uncomfortable around him.

    “The girl may also want to tell you in other subtle ways because perpetrators threaten their victims. Take the case of one of our clients; when she was brought to the centre and the case was exposed, she was happy that her mother did not die, because she had been told that if she said anything, her mother would die.

    “If your child falls victim, seek help for the child. Speak out; find solution to the problem; bring the perpetrator to book; because if left alone, he would move to another victim. And the only way you can really help is to make sure the perpetrator is taken out and locked up.

    Thereafter, let her be taken in for therapy and counselling, so she can get over it and have the opportunity to get medical care and psychosocial help. Let her also understand that is was not her fault.”

    Cases of infant abuses

    Said Valentine Peter Nkwo, a counsellor at the Mirabel Centre, cases of horrible sexual abuses abound. She said cases usually are reported to the police and taken up by the Centre, adding that “Until about two and half weeks ago, the youngest client in the organisation’s care was about 16 months old.

    “We have had a case of a 10-month old child whose mother was lucky to catch her father (her husband) penetrating her vaginal with his finger. When she first heard the baby’s cry and came out to ask what was happening, he said the baby was crying, so he carried her. It was on the second occasion that she noticed that his fingers were in her vagina, and she immediately made a distress call. When confronted, the man said the little girl is his daughter and he could never do any such thing to her.

    “Of course the mother did not believe him, and this caused a serious problem in the family which ultimately led to their separation. But unfortunately when they got to the police station after the man had beaten her, she did not tell the police about the sexual assault because she feared that the police would tell them to go and settle it at home.

    “One of the policewomen however noticed that anytime the man came near the baby, she cried and fidgeted and never wanted to be near him. She then interrogated the mother, who confided in her that the man had been molesting the baby, but begged her not to put it in the case file, as they were there purely for domestic violence. They were referred to an agency for domestic violence and while they were talking with them, the woman brought up the issue of sexual assault on her baby. Lo and behold, when they came to us and we tested the child, we found that there had been actual penetration.”

    Nkwo said “Sexual abuse is rape. Sexual abuse is anal penetration; it is putting the perpetrators penis in the victim’s mouth; making the child fondle the perpetrator; it is making you see me naked; it is getting naked in front of you and allowing you touch me; and it is making you get naked in front of me.”

    She also said they have had over 750 cases of rape at the centre since it opened in 2013.

    Victims as activists

    Speaking as a guest on an Africa Independent Television programme, Amazons, Chinyere Eyoh of Sexual Offences Awareness and Victims Rehabilitation Initiatives, who was a victim of rape, shared her story and why she never reported the case. She said she was raped for eight years by her uncle.

    “He started to sleep with me when I was five, but at age 13, I just told him that I wasn’t doing it again. He tried one or two times more, but I insisted that I was no longer allowing him.

    “It is sad to say and I regret that until my dad died, I never told him. My mum didn’t know as well until I came out to tell my story when I started this work. When she heard, she was devastated. She wondered how such could have happened right under her nose without her even suspecting. This is why I have the passion to do what I am doing; letting parents know  that unless they train themselves to recognise the signs and  become the parents they are meant to be, it can go on right under their nose without them knowing.

    Eyoh said parents must teach children that if somebody touches them in certain parts of their body, or says certain things to them, or if some uncle behaves in a certain manner to them, they should tell. “You don’t wait until that time when the child already knows more than you, to tell them.

    “Sex education starts at two, three and above. Let the child become comfortable with their body parts; call them by their names. Let the child know that you can be their first point of call when they have anything to share. In everyday conversation, talk about it. Take advantage of every opportunity you get.

    “Let children know that not every uncle or aunty is a friend, because in our culture, every one older than a child is an uncle or aunty. We should teach our children that adults should be respected, but let them know that uncles can do things to them that is not right.”

    On how she was able to rise above the abuse and become what she is today, Eyoh said not every survivor will need to come and share their stories the way she is doing today, but she encourages them to get someone to talk to, preferably their pastors.

     “A lot of times, victims and survivors are blamed by their families. They also shut them up. They don’t want the society to know what has happened. They keep it between themselves. Most survivors do not get the support they need from families, and that is why we are very heavy on awareness creation and teaching prevention strategies to parents and other child-care givers; so they know what to do to protect the children. We work with schools, with parents, and right now with the FCT Education Secretariat in Abuja. We have programmes running in schools for girls.”

    Serially abused

    Another victim, Dr Olufemi Kayode of Media Concern for Women and Children who is also a victim said hers started with family members.

    “It was a senior cousin who is four years older.” He came for holidays at her mother’s place and began to have sexual relationship with her. She said she didn’t tell anyone at the time because she was a minor of less than 12.

    When I was 12, another uncle of mine from my father’s side was discovered to be molesting me. I remember my father told my mum “go clean your daughter up,” and he was sent out of the house. That was the last we heard of that matter in my house.

    That did not stop the harassment. One thing that I have discovered through experience is that children who have been molested are very susceptible to being molested again. No matter how you move them, it doesn’t change anything. It is like it is written on their foreheads. They are easily picked out. It was like I carried this sticker on my head that read “molest me.” Different people wanted to touch me, to molest me and that went on and of course later on, I got gang raped as a teenager. When I was a woman, I was also raped. But all through all of these, I knew something wasn’t right.

    Most abuse of girls are from known family members, so parents have to look out for some signs instead of stopping family members from coming.

    I say to people, anyone can molest but you also have to be careful – not everyone is a molester. But we need to be cautious because what I have seen working in this area for 15 years, is that people get too afraid because of the dynamics surrounding child abuse.

    It is not just family members, it could be people who are closest to the family, it could be neighbours, cleaners, gardeners, teachers, pastors, drivers etc.

    Warning Signs

    On the issue of signs, we need to be careful not to send a message of fear, whereby the child becomes afraid of everyone around her. It is just to use your intuition, which women have a lot of.

    The signs might also not be sexual abuse but that something else is troubling the child; so we need to be careful except there are physical signs of bleeding or STDs, then you can say this child has been molested. It starts from a point, not every child is penetrated; but it is still abuse because the child has been exposed to certain sexual activity. You have one year, two years old, we have had 18 months old baby. We have seen all sorts of cases.

    Basically what we do is respond to sexual violence since 2012. I was in Punch newspaper then and I brought up the issue of child sexual abuse. Over 2,000 youth responded all over the country then that it has happened to them before, so the statistics is very high.

    Interestingly, we are in a country where we know that statistics is a big issue. We at Media Concern have been trying to get agencies to give us reports including the police. We started work officially in 2003 and we opened the first rape crisis centre in the country in 2005.

    We have recorded up to 7, 000 cases so far and 85 per cent are children below 10 years.  We have also had about 30 convictions. Some cases are not cases that you take to court because they happened a long time ago.

    Abroad people can be convicted for sexual offences that they committed a long time ago but our law does not allow that.

    In the face of a week legal system

    Despite the gravity of sexual abuses, perpetrators in Nigeria unfortunately go unpunished more of the time. Lawyers say over 70 percent of cases that have to do with gender-based violence do not end up in conviction. As a result, many Nigerian families, especially women and young girls at the receiving end of this crime hardly ever bother making a report at a police station. The general belief is that they would be turned back by the police, on grounds that it is a family matter, or that they should ‘settle’ the police to carry out its investigations.

    A good number of others simply do not bother because of their conviction that the court may take a painfully long time in bringing their assailants to justice. Often the defendant would have become tired, with the case becoming more of a burden on them or something better forgotten. This may be because the Investigating Police Officer is asking for some form ‘settlement’ to be present in the court or the perpetrator is a powerful person in the society who could afford to ‘buy’ the law.

    Inevitably, this has allowed impunity to fester, with sexual abuses and rape attaining an all time high in recent time.

     Sexual Offences Bill to the rescue?

    The Senate recently passed the Sexual Offences Bill to address sundry issues of sexual abuses, including rape and incest. But while the bill awaits the president’s signature, Nigerians have already begun picking holes and calling for another look-in before it is finally signed into law. Lawyers, activists and individuals alike are bothered that the country does not pass another ineffective law replete with various escape routes for offenders yet again. Even though it seems to come down hard on offenders, stipulating up to life imprisonment for convicted persons; Nigerians are worried over its loose areas.

    Lagos State Government for instance described it as “offensive, obnoxious, inconsistent and likely to increase the incidences of sexual abuses in Nigeria.” The Solicitor-general of the state, Lawal Pedro, while addressing the press alongside members of state’s Domestic and Sexual Violence Response Team (DSVRT) recently said the bill “seeks to introduce a strange defence based on the innocent act of a child (referred to as deceit) and belief of the perpetrator that a child is above 18 years when he committed the act of defiling the child,” and said that the state would not hesitate to institute a redress in court, should the president append his signature to it.

    Mrs Itoro Eze-Anaba of the Mirabel Centre, also cited this loophole when she said that there are sections in the Sexual Violence Offences Bill 2014 where defence is given to perpetrators. To her, such sections should be expunged.

    She explained that this is inconsistent with the interest and welfare of children and contradicts the Child’s Right Act.

    She however said the police are very active in helping her organisation access cases. “The girls are referred to us mostly from the Family Support Unit of the police stations. The ones that don’t have this unit also send them to us; likewise the hospitals and the relevant government agencies. Some of the girls also walk into the centre themselves. People are beginning to speak out; but for every one person that comes out, there are 10 more persons who are not coming out.”

    She noted that any time they get cases; they make it a point of duty to report to the social welfare because the centre believes that if a man could sleep with his daughter or any other minor, then all minors in that community are at risk. “So, we follow up to make sure that the man is arrested.”

    Talking about victims under her organisation’s care, she said “When they first come, they look dejected, sad, depressed and suicidal; but after going through counselling and medical treatment, they walk out with their heads high. They go through transformation because they are in a place where they are not judged, where someone has listened to them and believed them and has not blamed them; and the services are free!

    “Some of them come in and do not want to talk; some come with their parents and allow their parents do the talking. But if it is a matured minor, we try to have a one-on-one with them because they tend to open up when their parents are not around.

    “We try to make sure that even if they’re not talking, they are taking the medical treatment because there are certain drugs they must take within 73 hours, so that they can be protected against HIV/AIDS.”

    Former Ikeja Nigerian Bar Association chairman, Barr. Onyekachi Ubani, while responding on the same television programme, expressed concern about the Nigerian legal system, which allows several reported cases of sexual abuse and rape drag indefinitely. This, according to him, is because after an arrest, prosecution, investigation and concerted efforts at making available witnesses in court, accused persons often end up escaping conviction.

    He said this may be because the Investigating Police Officer, IPO, has been transferred or because he has required the complainant to fund his trips to court. And if he is not able to do this, the IPO may not be present in court, which often culminates series of adjournment and ultimately a loss of interest by the victim.

    He said “90 per cent of these cases often do not end up in successful trials,” but insisted that “Nigeria does not lack good laws but we have issues of implementation.”

    He said “We don’t have the political will and our institutions are not strong enough to implement laws. Also, the law seems not to be looking at those who have money because in Nigeria the more money you have, the more you can buy justice.”

    Ubani also condemned the tendency of the police to advise settlement out of court. Usually this affects the faith of victim/complainant and or her relatives. In cases of incest, especially father to daughter, such advise usually discourages the wife/mother of the victim, and next she begins to worry more about saving her husband  in this case the accused, from going to jail, or even the stigma that may follow such pursuance.

    Police’s response

    When The Nation called the Lagos State Police Public Relations Officer, Mr Kenneth Nwosu to comment on the matter of police, especially the part that have seemingly blamed it for  making it difficult for victims to get justice, he said, “It cannot be true. The Commissioner of Police takes issues of gender-based violence very seriously; we don’t joke with it. There is a directive now that any case of gender-based violence should be taken to state CID, where there is a trained personnel to take care of it. As I speak to you now, there is a case in Owutu, Ikorodu, where it was alleged that due to accusation and counter-accusation of infidelity, the family of a man spread pepper and inserted a bottle into the private part of a woman. As soon as we got the report, the CP directed that the case be taken to Panti for swift investigation and action. So anybody saying the police are not working is living in the past and is obviously not talking about the Lagos State Police Command.”

    The PPRO concluded by reiterating that “It is our duty to protect the vulnerable in the society and we are trying our best to do that.”