On January 18, 2014, Adeleke, who is an apprentice meat seller
at Tinubu Market in Iyana-Ipaja, Lagos, allegedly added his name to a long list
of sexual predators walking the streets of Lagos.
That day, which would change the life of 12-year-old Bisola (not
real name) forever, was when Adeleke ambushed the young girl and raped her for
one hour.
Adeleke was eventually arrested but in his attempt to escape
from the police custody, he was hit by a moving vehicle when he ran across the
road.
Adeleke’s boss supplies meat to Bisola’s mother, a food vendor.
It was learnt that the suspect had on occasions delivered meat to the girl’s
mother.
Giving detail of the
incident, Bisola narrated;
“I followed a friend
to buy sugar in the market (she sells sugar to assist her family) and when I
was coming, he (Adeleke) told me to follow him to their shop to collect meat
for my mother. I followed him but I did not enter the shop. There was nobody
else around. It was after 7pm. He told me to enter but I said he should bring
out the meat. He then said I should take the meat from the freezer. As I
attempted to open the freezer, he grabbed me and tied a cloth over my face and
mouth. “He held me down and pulled off my pants. He did not leave me until
around 8.30pm. I could not shout. The place was dark.”
The girl paused, her
eyes moist with tears as she narrated the story. “I am happy a vehicle hit
him,” she said.
Bisola was raped for
an hour by her estimation. She said she remembered the time Adeleke
finally released her because she had to look at the clock on the wall of the
shop because she knew her mother would have been looking for her. The young
girl rushed out of her captor’s embrace bleeding and bruised. But shame
and confusion would not allow her to go straight to her mother.
Her mother narrated
that on that fateful day, she had expected Bisola to return but when she did
not, she retired to bed, thinking that her daughter must have stayed late in
her friend’s house.
“I heard her enter the
house later. But around 3am, she started to sob loudly,” she said.
Both mother and
daughter live in a small decrepit wooden shack around Gowon Estate.
When the woman went to
check on her daughter, she noticed her underwear was soaked in blood. which had
started running down her legs. She was about to scream but quickly changed her
mind because she was afraid of alerting her husband, Bisola’s step-father, to
what had happened.
“But by morning, I
could not hide it anymore. She told me the person responsible for it and around
5am, we went to report at the Gowon Estate Police Division, Ipaja. The man was
later arrested,” the woman said.
Bisola was taken to
the hospital and a doctor who examined her immediately recommended surgery to
repair her damaged private part. After the surgery, she was on admission for
two days.
The doctor’s report
obtained by our correspondent indicated that she was brought to the hospital
“bleeding profusely from second degree laceration in her private part and
broken hymen.”
But a day after the
young man was arrested, he was released by the police.
Director of the Esther
Child Rights Foundation, Mrs. Esther Ogwu, said she intervened in the matter
when the victim’s step brother reported the incident to her.
She told Saturday
PUNCH, “It was really absurd that he would be released that way. I could not
believe that in the face of the increasing child abuse and molestation being
reported every day, the police could still release a suspect without promptly
charging him to court.
“The girl was raped on
a Saturday; by Monday, the man was arrested. But by Wednesday, the family said
they went to the police station and were informed by the investigating police
officer that he had been released.
“I informed the Lagos
Public Advice Center of the development and officials of the center contacted
the police division. The IPO was forced to rearrest the boy. I just wonder if
the police have heard of the Child Rights Act.”
One of the reasons for
enacting the Child Rights Act in 2003 is to stem the tide of child abuse and
molestation in Nigeria and reinforce the legal provision against it.
Adeleke was rearrested
and locked up preparatory to his transfer to the State Criminal Investigation
Department, Yaba.
But the suspect had a
different idea. He decided to escape. As soon as the IPO turned her back,
Adeleke ran out of the station and was about to cross the road when he was hit
by a commercial bus.
Of course, the bus did
not stop, as he would later tell our correspondent in the hospital.
An OP Mesa military
team, who saw him injured on the road took him to the hospital.
Asked why he decided
to escape, he said, “I was just afraid. I did not know that it would become
such a serious matter.”
But when he was asked
why he raped the girl when he could have paid to sleep with a commercial s*x
worker, he said he did not r**e her.
“I did not r**e her
sir. She is my girlfriend. We have been dating since early last year. She
always called me ‘okobo’ (a Yoruba word for eunuch),” he said.
Bisola’s mother would
later refute this claim as a concocted story because she only moved to Ipaja
with her daughter in August 2013.
Adeleke disputed that
Bisola is just 12 years old which makes her a minor.
He said Bisola had
told him that she was 18 years old. But when our correspondent met the girl,
there was nothing to indicate that a man could be fooled into thinking she
could even be up to 15 years old.
The suspect said,
“That day, I went to buy fuel and she followed me. When I returned home, I told
her to leave but she would not. She was tickling me and calling me okobo.
“I told her to leave
and I saw her off but she came back and started tickling me again. I then
decided to do it. But when I pulled off her underwear and realized she was
still a virgin, I decided to leave her but she started taunting me again. Then
I did it. I did not know that she would bleed like that and that it would
become a police matter.”
When asked why he
blindfolded and muffled the girl’s mouth with a piece of cloth, Adeleke denied
doing that.
The young man, who
said he was an indigene of Abeokuta, only finished primary school.
It’s been learnt that
since Adeleke got to the hospital, his relations had not come to pay for his
treatment. The hospital is planning to discharge him prematurely. It was learnt
that his treatment had been stopped.
But there is fear that
Adeleke might escape if discharged as the IPO had only visited the suspect
once.
Adeleke said his
mother was late but added that his brother and boss were looking for money to
offset his medical bills.
Meanwhile, Bisola’s
mother and step-father have changed course on the case.
When our correspondent
visited them on Sunday, the step-father, who did not hide his anger, said he
had no money to prosecute the suspect.
“They should release
him. I don’t have any money to move around to prosecute anybody. We have spent
enough money already. Nobody should come and disturb me again,” he said.
Bisola’s step-father,
who did not seem to be literate, was told that prosecuting Adeleke was not his
job but that of the police and that he did not have to spend money.
“What about moving
here and there when the police call us or when we need to go to court? The man
himself is poor. It is not worth it,” he said.
Bisola’s mother, who
seemed helpless in the face of her husband’s attitude, also concurred.
“We spent money on her
treatment; we have even incurred debt. We will leave the matter to God,” she
said.
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