Tag: Rape

  • Police exonerate serving reps member of rape allegation

    The Imo State Police Command on exonerated a member of the House of Representatives representing Ohaji/Egbema Oguta and Oru West Federal Constituency, Hon. Uju Kingsley Chima of the rape allegation levelled against him by one Mrs. Nkeiruka Cynthia Kamalu.

    The Command dismissed Kamalu’s allegations against Hon. Uju as false and baseless.

    It stated this in a statement signed by Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO) Orlando Ikeokwu, which was obtained by The Nation.

    The statement reads: “The attention of the command has been drawn to the news making the rounds in some media, dailies and other social platform in which one Nkeiruka Cynthia Kamalu claimed that she was raped by one Hon. Uju Kingsley Chima and as such claimed she was unlawfully arrested, tortured and detained.

    “The command wish to state that on 6/5/2019 the command received a report of a case of advanced fee fraud, conspiracy, child trafficking, forgery and threat to life against one Nkeiru Cynthia Kamalu ‘f’ 40 years of Plot 4, Ademola Close By Ire-Akari Estate, Ago, Lagos State.

    “The command arrested two suspects namely -(1) Nkeiruka Cynthia Kamalu ’f’ and (ii) Emeka Muoneka ’m’. Both of the suspects made confessional statements as to the offence committed. For the purpose of clarity, the said Nkeiruka Cynthia Kamalu ’f’ called Hon. Kingsley Uju Chima claiming to be pregnant for him and as such blackmailed him into sending her various sums of money. She later claimed to have given birth to twins and one died of which she sent him picture of a baby boy.

    However, in the course of the investigation, the following were discovered.

    “That she was never in Canada as she claimed.

    “That she forged Canadian visa which she snapped and sent to Hon. Kingsley Uju Chima to trick him into sending money.

    “That Emeka Muoneka ‘m’ took her to Nnewi in Anambra State where she bought a three-day old baby boy at the sum of N1,800,000.

    “That she installed a software in her phone in which she used to call Hon. Kingsley Uju Chia, to ensure that a foreign number appears whenever she calls.

    “That both Nkeiruka Cynthia Kamalu and Emeka Muoneka led operatives to Nnewi, Anambra State where they bought a three-day old baby, for the purpose of deceiving Hon. Kingsley Uju Chima and blackmail him into sending money to her.

    In view of the above findings, the command said she was charged to court for the offence, adding that there was no time she was victimized, torturer detained.

    The command therefore urged members of the public to discharge the allegations as “they are false and baseless.”

    On September 11, 2019, Kamalu, a businesswoman, filed a fundamental rights suit marked FHC/L/CS/1458/19 alleging “intimidation, mounting surveillance and or illegal oral invitation threat of life and annihilation of property,” against the lawmaker.

    She alleged that she was raped by Chima, on August 9, 2015, while she was married to a United States-based doctor.

    “I lodged the case first at New Owerri Police Station wherein he influenced it and I wrote a Petition to the Inspector-General of Police, Force State Quarters, Abuja. The petition was assigned to Zone 9 Police Command, Umuahia, Abia State.

    According to her, the police persuaded her to settle with the lawmaker and soon after, they resumed an incestuous relationship

    Mrs Kamalu claimed that afterwards, the lawmaker offered to pay her N20 million if she was divorced by her husband, Mr Gabriel Igbibi. Her husband subsequently left her and her new resumed relationship also failed, she said.

    She further alleged that the lawmaker caused her to be arrested in Lagos on 27th day of May, 2019 by SARS and that she was tortured and detained for seven days, after which she was arraigned on a fictitious N40 million theft charge.

  • Teacher rapes, impregnates 12-year-old student

    A 12-year-old schoolgirl has been raped by her teacher in Namtari, a community in Yola South Local Government Area of Adamawa State.

    According to reports, she was confirmed pregnant on Thursday by a referral centre that admitted her for care.

    Bashir Tahir, a member of the Adamawa Hope Center located at the state Specialist Hospital in Yola where the girl was rushed to, confirmed Thursday that the girl had been put in the family way as a result of the rape perpetrated by her class teacher, Nathan Yusuf.

    “She has received all the needed support and the medical tests required.

    “So far she is free from all sexually transmitted diseases. But she will start receiving anti-natal care next week at the Hope Center,” Bashir said.

    The Adamawa State Command of the Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC), which arrested the teacher, has assured that he would be made to answer for his act.

    The state Commandant of the corps, Abdullahi Nuruddeen, told newsmen on Thursday during a briefing in his office: “I always charge my men not to relent in their effort on arrest and prosecution of crimes, more especially the ones endangering the life of people like rape cases.

    ”On 2nd September, 2019, around 2:30 pm, we arrested a suspect of rape in person of Nathan Yusuf (37) who is a teacher at Gurel Primary School Namtari, Yola South, suspected to have raped his primary school pupil who is below 14 years of age, which he confessed to have given her codeine syrup before raping her.

    “As soon as we finish our investigation, the suspect will be charged to court.

    “We are advising parents to be very vigilant o their children and report such crimes to the relevant authorities for judicial action.”

    An uncle of the victim, Sulaiman Namtari, who also spoke to newsmen, said the action of the teacher shocked the community because he was held in high esteem.

    He said: “Every member of the community reserves tremendous respect for the teacher as he has been in the community for years.

    “There is no house he doesn’t enter and every member of the community knows him very well. What he did was a perfidy of the highest order and for that we want authorities not to spare him.”

    The suspect confessed to the act and promised he would take care of the baby after delivery.

    He also said he would take full responsibility for his action.

  • Governors’ wives write SGF, IGP, demand special court for rape cases

    Governors’ wives write SGF, IGP, demand special court for rape cases

    The wives of the 36 states’ governors have written a petition to the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Boss Mustapha, demanding the setting up of special offences courts for rape and defilement cases, and for such cases to be charged to the courts and heard without undue delays.
    The petition, which was copied the Inspector-General of Police, Mr. Mohammed Adamu, also urged him to direct the creation of rape and sexual offences desks in police stations across the country where they do not exist, and that appropriately, trained personnel should be designated to provide timely support for victims.
    The petition was signed by Wife of Chairman, Nigerian Governors Forum, Mrs. Bisi Fayemi; Chair, Northern Governors Wives Forum, Dr. Amina Abubakar and Chair, Southern Governors Wives Forum, Mrs. Betsy Obaseki, on behalf of others, which was made available to journalists in Ado-Ekiti yesterday.
    The wives of the governors also pleaded with all political, religious and community leaders to speak up against the abuse of women and children.They condemned the levels of violence against women and children in the country, saying: “As mothers, we empathise with survivors of these heinous acts and urge them to be courageous in speaking up no matter how long it takes. We salute them.
    “We lend our voices to that of our First Lady, Dr. Aisha Buhari, who recently called for action to be taken on the increasing rate at which women and children are being sexually abused in Nigeria. On a daily basis, we are inundated with cases of defilement (of even babies of six months old), rape, domestic violence, sexual harassment and murders of women and children.
    “It is also worrisome that women and children with special needs have also become targets of sexual violence. We note with concern that in spite of the existence of laws at the federal level such as the Violence Against Persons (Prohibition) Act of 2015 as well as legislations at state level to protect the well-being of women and children, perpetrators still continue their despicable acts with impunity.
    “On the rare occasions when incidences of rape are reported, victims are intimidated and shamed into silence.“We hereby urged the Inspector-General of Police to direct the Police to treat rape and defilement cases with the speed and seriousness to ensure justice for victims.”However, they urged the Minister of Health to ensure provision of timely, sensitive and comprehensive medical services to victims of sexual violence.

  • Ronaldo will not face charges over alleged rape

    Football star Cristiano Ronaldo will not face charges after being accused of sexual assault, US prosecutors say.

    Kathryn Mayorga, 34, had alleged that the Juventus player raped her at a Las Vegas hotel in 2009.
    She reportedly reached an out-of-court settlement with the Portuguese star in 2010, but sought to reopen the case in 2018. He denied the allegations.
    In a statement on Monday, Las Vegas prosecutors said the claims could not “be proven beyond reasonable doubt”.
    The Clark County District Attorney’s office said the victim reported an assault in 2009, but refused to state where it had happened or who the attacker was. As a result police were unable “to conduct any meaningful investigation”.
    In August 2018, Las Vegas police investigated the alleged crime again at the request of the victim.
    But the statement added: “Based upon a review of information at this time, the allegations of sexual assault against Cristiano Ronaldo cannot be proven beyond a reasonable doubt. Therefore, no charges will be forthcoming.”
    German weekly magazine Der Spiegel, first published a story about the allegation last year.
    It said that in 2010, she reached an out-of-court settlement with Ronaldo involving a $375,000 (£288,000) payment for agreeing never to go public with the allegations.
    Ms Mayorga’s lawyer said she had been inspired to re-open the case by the #MeToo movement.
    Ronaldo has not denied that the two met in Las Vegas in 2009, but said that what happened between them was consensual.
    At the time, Ronaldo was playing for Manchester United, and about to join Real Madrid, where he spent the next nine years.
    Ronaldo moved to Juventus last July. He has won the Ballon d’Or – awarded to the world’s best footballer – in 2008, 2013, 2014, 2016 and 2017.
    BBC

  • Being busty is a blessing to my career- Ibukun Adeleke

    Adeleke Blessing Ibukunoluwa known as Ibukun Adeleke in the Nigerian movie industry is a budding actress and make-up artiste whose sights are set on making it in Nollywood.
    The curvy role interpreter who hails from Oyo State in a chat with TheNewsGuru noted that being busty has been a blessing to her career.
    According to her:” Being busty has been a blessing to my career.I love my boobs. It gets me movie roles, but certainly not all roles. My talent has opened doors for me too”.
    Ibukun who has produced two films of her ‘Obiri’ and yet to be released ‘Aderomola’, also shared her worst movie location experience.
    The graduate of University of Lagos said:”My worst location experience would be going to a location some years back and not getting paid . I spent seven days at the location without getting a role”.
     
     

    Speaking further, Adeleke decried the growing spate of rape in Nigeria, adding that rape is a disaster.
    “Rapists are meant to be castrated. Rape is a disaster. The Nigerian society is becoming more aware when it comes to matters relating to women’s development. Women are gradually speaking up, we now have the courage to share our truth”.

  • Reps move against rape, other violent crimes in Nigeria

    From Jonas Ike, Abuja
    The House of Representatives is to legislate against the scourge of rape and other sexual offences against children in Nigeria.
    This followed a motion of urgent public importance sponsored by Hon. Shina Peller on the matter on the floor of the House in Abuja.
    Debating the motion, Peller noted that gender-based violence, such as rape and other forms of sexual abuses, have assumed serious dimension in Nigeria and advocated for stringent measures.
    He disclosed that in Nigeria, the prevalence of rape cases is estimated at 80%, with the children and even babies not being spared while the prevalence of incidents of rape among adolescent females is between 11 and 55%.
    The lawmaker further said that the United Nations Children Education Fund (UNICEF) has observed that one in four Nigerian girls must have experienced sexual violence before the age of eighteen.
    Consequently, the House unanimously adopted the motion when the Speaker Hon.Femi Gbajabiamila put the matter to a voice vote.
    The House therefore the urged Federal Government to establish rehabilitation and re-integration programmes for victims of rape and other sexual offences in every state of the federation;
    It also called on the Attorney-General of the Federation AGF and Minister of Justice to prepare a National Policy Framework to guide the implementation of the Sexual Offences Act that will provide further certainty to the law regarding the age at which a person can consent to sexual activity.
  • No time is too long to report rape, sexual assault

    No time is too long to report rape, sexual assault

    A Professor of Health Education, Bidemi Idowu says no time is too long or stale to report rape or sexual abuse, as long as there is actually a case to answer .
    Idowu said this in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on the sidelines of delivering the 69th Inaugural Lecture of the Lagos State University (LASU).
    The theme of the lecture was; Sexuality: The Savour, the Caution, the Pleasure.
    According to her, most girls or women who were just coming out after 10 to 20 years to report a case of abuse might just be doing so because they were then in an era of not reporting such .
    “People are now coming out to report rape or sexual assault because they were not enlightened to do so during their era and have a case to prove.
    “However, there may not be a case of having to prosecute the perpetrator because there may not be evidence but at least, the culprit has been exposed,” she said.
    Idowu noted that most girls or women have been abused at a time or the other in a lifetime but there might not be a penetration.
    The professor said rape could be termed `fantasy’ because for some individuals, their minds were already so perverted that they did not derive pleasure except they rape or are raped.
    “This however, is not a common phenomenon,” she noted.
    According to her, about 35 per cent of women who were raped as minors were also raped as adults, compared to 14 per cent of women without an early rape history.
    The don noted that 28 per cent of male rape victims were first raped when they were 10 years old.
    Idowu identified the forms of sexual assault that were usually termed as rape include kissing of a sexual nature, touching the other person’s breast, thigh, buttocks, penis, vulva or anus, masturbation of the victim by the perpetrator.
    She mentioned also, oral -genital contact, including Cunnilingus, penetration either through the vaginal or anus with a penis, finger or other objects, Exhibitionism and Frottage.
    Idowu encouraged rape victims not to relent in exposing the perpetrators even if they ended up not getting justice, as this would expose the culprit and also serve as deterrent to others.
    She advised that Counselling unit of universities should be expanded beyond career and academic matters to include issues encompassing family issue and sexuality.
    The Professor advised that issue of sexuality should be made priority among staff and students in the university, as it did not concern only rape but was all encompassing.
    According to him, this was an exceptional way to develop life skills in students.
    Idowu also urged government agents to be bold enough to implement laws passed by past government on child abuse to checkmate the spread of the menace.

  • Abuja school bursar arrested for raping, impregnating pupil

    Operatives of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps have arrested the Bursar of the Government Secondary School, Dangara, Abaji, in the Federal Capital Territory, for allegedly defiling and impregnating a 15-year-old pupil.
    The 51-year-old suspect, Mr Gabriel Ekundayo, who hails from Ilorin, Kwara State, allegedly lured the victim to his house and drugged her before defiling her.
    It was learnt that Ekundayo had been handed over to the National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons for further investigation and possible prosecution.
    According to NAPTIP, the bursar was the Senior Secondary School 3 pupil’s guardian in school and she spent her last holiday with her assailant and his family.
    The victim reportedly took ill in the suspect’s house after the incident. In order to hide his crime, the suspect allegedly gave the girl some drugs and she was said to have fainted soon after and was rushed to a medical facility.
    In a related development, the agency has also apprehended a 41-year-old engineer, Mr Festus Femi, for defiling pupils of the same school on different occasions.
    The suspect, who hails from Ondo State, resides in the Bwari Area Council, Abuja, and was said to have engaged in sexual acts with three pupils aged 12, 13 and 15 on separate occasions.
    A statement by NAPTIP on Tuesday read in part, “The first victim lives with her parents in Bwari. The victim stated that she met Festus through her classmate, who asked her to accompany her to Festus’ house.
    “On getting to the house, Festus turned the volume of his music equipment very high and defiled her in the presence of her friend. He threatened to kill her if she told anyone.
    “The second victim lives with her aunt in Bwari. The third victim said Festus was her former neighbour and each time he had sex with her, he gave her N500.”
    The Director-General of NAPTIP, Julie Okah-Donli, while speaking on the arrests, said, “We condemn the actions of these two men; we will not relent in our name-and-shame policy. Rape suspects will be prosecuted for their crime against humanity and NAPTIP will not hesitate to bring the full wrath of the law on any rapist.
    “Schoolgirls are to be careful of the kind of friends they keep. A lot of teenagers are led astray by fellow teenagers, who are unfortunately victims of the crime themselves.”

  • I have never been raped, lady who first accused COZA founder of having sex with her clarifies

    A Nigerian lady identified as Ese Walter, who came into spotlight in 2013 after she came out to accuse Pastor Biodun Fatoyinbo of the Commonwealth of Zion Assembly (COZA), recently took to social media to set the record straight.
    In wake of the recent rape allegation against Fatoyinbo by Busola Dakolo, the wife of Nigerian singer, Timi Dakolo, Walter has found herself being talked about once again.
    Walter who had earlier stated that she does not want to be dragged into the current scandal in her post had said she is done playing the victim role because she has since moved on from that aspect of her life.
    In a post on her Facebook page, Walter has now clarified rumours making the rounds about her. According to her, she has never been raped in her entire life and people need to stop spreading false news.
    Some individuals, have been alleging that Walter was raped by Fatoyinbo back in 2009. Clearing the air on the misconception, she wrote,
    “Ok, it begs to be said. I have never been raped in my life. Don’t spread false news for trend. Please.”

  • The Story Of Busola Dakolo’s Unknown ‘Cousin’ – Azu Ishiekwene

    Azu Ishiekwene
    Busola Dakolo has a cousin she has never met and might never even meet. They don’t share blood ties, of course. But like tens of hundreds of victims of sexual abuse, there’s a common thread of grief that binds in a way that only those who feel it know.
    Since last week, we have been caught in the throes of the grievous charges of sexual predation levied against the pastor of the Commonwealth of Zion Assembly (COZA), Biodun Fatoyinbo, by Mrs. Dakolo. It’s a sad and pathetic story which has left its victim scarred for nearly 20 years, until recently when she summoned the courage to confront the demon.
    But this other victim, whom I described as Dakolo’s unknown cousin, may never be able to tell her own story.
    Not now, maybe never. I may never even have been able tell this story for her, if our paths did not cross in a most unusual way. Fate made our paths cross.
    Basic education (beginning from primary up to three years of junior secondary school) is supposed to be free. But it’s free only on paper. Schools still find ways to extort all kinds of levies from parents, forcing millions of them from very poor homes to do all kinds of menial jobs after school to help their parents meet up.
    Some manage to get through junior secondary school, but the financial toll often becomes unbearable when they have to register for external examinations, the cost of which is higher than the national minimum wage.
    It was in the process of finding a way to bridge the gap for these extremely vulnerable ones that OpenFees met with the young girl whom I described in the opening as Busola Dakolo’s cousin. But she’s not, only their stories are similar in an agonizing way. I’ll just call her Asabe.
    She’s 15 and an SS3 student of Government Secondary School, Dangara, Federal Capital Territory, Abuja. Asabe was one of the 97 indigent, but promising students that we identified with the help of school authorities. Each one of the 97 – and God knows how many hundreds of unreached others – has a heart-breaking story of personal struggle against destiny-threatening odds to share.
    To paraphrase Leo Tolstoy in Anna Karenina, all destitute students are alike, but each story of destitution carries its own peculiar misery. Asabe lost her father three years ago, at about the time she was moving from junior to senior secondary school. When her father died, she nearly gave up hope. The burden of looking after herself and her two younger siblings fell squarely on her mother.
    Her mother was a petty trader, making barely enough to put food on the table on some days. In spite of that, Mama Asabe was determined to see her daughter through school. But she was also concerned about how to keep an eye on Asabe who was in boarding school in Abuja. She made enquiries and later found out there was someone in GSS Dangara, who comes from Ilorin like themselves, whom she could ask to be Asabe’s guardian in school.
    Things seemed to go well for a while – and why not? Asabe’s new guardian and staff of GSS Dangara was not just a distant “relative” from Ilorin, he is also married and has children. On the face of it, he is just the kind of guardian in whose care an unsuspecting parent might entrust a child.
    Believing that her daughter was in safe hands, Mama Asabe scraped all she could from her petty trade and sent to Mr. Guardian for Asabe’s upkeep in school from time to time. But Mr. Guardian nursed other ideas of his own. He was only waiting for a moment to strike. He was waiting for Asabe’s vulnerable moment.
    In September, Asabe’s mother took ill. No one was sure exactly what it was, but Asabe suspects it was dementia. Her mother went out one day and has not returned since that fateful September day. With no father and her mother now missing, Asabe was bereft. Paying fees became a problem. Because of cost, she could also not afford the cost of travelling to her ancestral Ilorin home, where her grandmother stays.
    Perhaps she was also thinking of the burden that grandma currently bears. Her grandmother, who is still in Ilorin, took over the care of Asabe’s other two siblings after Mama Asabe went missing. Asabe had to start fending for herself, to lessen grandma’s burden.
    Mr. Guardian at GSS Dangara knew when to strike and chose Asabe’s dire moment of need sometime in April. When OpenFees first met Asabe and enrolled her as one of our 97 scholars, she was doing quite well in school in spite of the mountains she had to climb. The alarm bells went off when she failed her JAMB, scoring 144 when her peers on the same programme scored between 292 and 301.
    She said that in June, a member of her church called her aside and suggested to her that she might be pregnant. She said she did not know and wasn’t sure. But she remembered that day in April when things might have gone awry.
    She had complained to Mr. Guardian that she had leg pain and he gave her money to go and buy a drug, “Chaptetizer cyproheptadine”, from a pharmacy. He administered the drugs, enough doses to knock Asabe off to sleep. In her text message to us later, she said when she woke up the next morning, she found blood stains and was frightened. Mr. Guardian had apparently raped her but warned her never to tell.
    When we received the report during the Sallah break, we quickly moved Asabe from her friend’s place where she had taken shelter to a safe and secure place temporarily and followed quickly with a report to NAPTIP, the agency for the prohibition of trafficking in persons.
    You would think that everyone up the food chain would be outraged. We thought so. NAPTIP weighed in and invited Mr. Guardian to a meeting over the matter. He turned up kicking and generally behaving in a manner that suggested he would stop at nothing to obstruct the investigation. His employer, GSS Dangara, initially appeared genuinely contrite and determined to root out the randy staff – until the Ag. Director FCT Secondary School Education Board, Nanre Emeje, stepped in.
    She pilled obstacles in the way and tried to block access to Asabe, a girl desperately in need of help. At one point, she threatened us and the school authorities took a cue and mounted their own obstacle in our way; only NAPTIP’s unwavering commitment for justice brought relief. Yet, there’s still a long road ahead.
    The pregnancy test on Asabe before she was returned to school was negative but her physical appearance has changed remarkable, stoking fears of ectopic pregnancy. Her emotional scar is indescribable, and her future may have been blighted forever. And how many more of such cases litter the land?
    Will Emeje spare a thought for this 15-year-old orphan, carrying a burden many times her age and yet living daily in fear and hopelessness? Will Emeje let justice take its course? Who will speak for Asabe, Busola Dakolo’s unknown cousin?
    Ishiekwene is the Managing Director/Editor-In-Chief of The Interview and member of the board of the Global Editors Network