At an age
when most girls are still burning the midnight candle, in preparation for the
senior secondary school examinations, 15-year-old Aishat has become a mother.
Less than
two weeks after she had the baby, her mother-in-law and her lover’s siblings
forcibly took the baby from her. They also allegedly beat and kicked her out of
their home.
Aishat, a
Junior Secondary School (JSS3) dropout, didn’t know what to do after she was
sent out of her lover’s house and her two weeks’ old baby snatched from her.
She went to
call her mother, Adijat, hoping she woman would resolve the issue and retrieve
her baby. However, her mother was also thoroughly beaten.
According to
Aishat’s mother, life has been too tough and difficult for her to handle after
the death of her bricklayer husband. The financial situation was so bad that
she and her children now sleep outside in the cold.
According to
Adijat, she and her three children sleep in front of a locked up shop at
Iyano-Oba.
They took to
sleeping there because Adijat, who sells sachet water, could no longer afford
to pay house rent, which is N2,000 monthly.
Aishat’s
traumatic story started when she was 12 years’ old. She was staying with her
maternal grandmother in Ilorin, Kwara State, when she was first defiled.
It was later
discovered that Aishat wasn’t the man’s only victim. The man, identified as
Taiwo, was later arrested, but she couldn’t tell if he was arraigned or not. She
was never called to testify in court.
After her
grandmother died, Aishat returned to Lagos, to start assisting her mother to
sell water. Then she met Sunday Rowland.
She couldn’t
remember the year she met Sunday, but she ran away to stay with him for a week
in 2015. This means that Sunday started having sexual intercourse with Aishat
when she was less than 13 years’ old. Sunday is a carpenter and sometimes works
as bus conductor. He is believed to be 28 years’ old. He lives in a room
apartment in his mother’s house at Jakande, Ajagbadi, Okokomaiko.
He told
Aishat that he loved her and promised to marry her. She believed him. She
disclosed that on the very first day they met, Sunday compelled her to spend
the night with him.
She,
however, quickly added: “But we didn’t do anything. No sex.”
She said:
“Sunday’s mother asked me to bring my parents for introduction. Sunday came
with me to see my mother. He told my mother that he was going to marry me. I
started staying with him, his mother, sisters and brothers. They are many. They
stay in one room, gave Sunday one room and rented out other rooms. I assisted
Sunday’s mum in hawking oranges. I became sick. The woman took me to a nurse,
who operates in a room apartment. The nurse said I was four months pregnant.
“I thought
my mother-in-law liked me, especially since I used to assist her to hawk
oranges. But she and others joined hands in beating my mother and I two weeks
after I had my baby. They didn’t care that I had just been delivered of a baby.
They beat and kicked me out of their house and took my baby.”
Adijat, 36,
said Aishat was the oldest among her children. The second child is two and a
half years old, while the third is just seven months old. Adijat’s husband died
when she was just three months pregnant. She said the man died after a
lingering typhoid fever.
She said:
“When my husband died, Aishat had to drop out of school. I couldn’t afford
school fees. We were living at Iba then, but later forced to leave our
apartment because I couldn’t pay the N2,000 monthly rent. We came here to
Iyano-Oba to live. We sleep in front of this shop, morning and night, rain or
sun.
“My parents
are late and my husband’s father is late too. His mother is alive, but very
old. I ought to be taking care of her. I’m from Kwara State, but my husband is
from Osun State. We refused to return to Osun State after everything fell apart
because there’s nothing there for us. How do we survive? Who will take care of
us?
“I realised
that something was going between Sunday and Aishat when I saw him twice with
her. Then, Aishat ran away from home in 2015. I started looking for her and
found her in Sunday’s house. I also met his mother. The mother told me that
Sunday was going to marry Aishat.”
Last year,
Adijat realised that Aishat was looking sickly, she took her for pregnancy test
and it was positive. She dragged the girl to Sunday’s mother.
“When I got
to their house, they said they knew she was pregnant. That they had already
registered her with one nurse operating in a room apartment,” said Adijat. “It
was after that discovery that she started living with them.”
Adijat
thought that her first daughter was finally settled, thus she could focus on
taking care of the other two children, she didn’t know her troubles were just
beginning.
She
recounted that Aishat was six months pregnant when serpent crept into the
otherwise perceived rosy relationship of Aishat and Sunday.
Adijat said:
“He stopped giving her food and money. She used to come to meet me for food.
Sometimes, even with pregnancy, Aishat would join me in hawking sachet water.
If we don’t sell the sachet water, we wouldn’t be able to raise money to buy
food. I used to collect the bags of sachet water on credit; it’s only after
selling that I would pay the owner.
“Sunday
bought a phone of N2,000 for Aishat. She was hungry and had to use the phone in
exchange for food. She gave it to a Hausa man and he gave her noodles and some
money. Sunday and his family got angry over that. She was pregnant and hungry.
What were they expecting her to do? What’s the use of a phone when you’re
hungry?”
Adijat said
that on the day Aishat went into labour, she was alone in Sunday’s family’s
house. She rushed to Iyano-Oba to meet her, confused and worried that she was
“urinating on her body.” Immediately, Adijat knew Aishat’s water had broken.
Adijat
rushed her to the nurse’s place, but the woman refused to commence treatment.
The nurse said that some vital items, needed for baby delivery, had not been
bought.
Adijat
recounted: “In fact, Sunday and his people had not bought anything. Not a
single item. I ran around and raised some money; I bought two baby clothes and
a shawl. I gave the nurse N2,000 to commence work. Aishat delivered a baby girl
two weeks ago. We took her home to Sunday’s family.”
On the eight
day after delivery, they had a christening. A day after the christening, Aishat
was kicked out and the baby collected by Sunday’s mother.
Recollecting
the drama that led to Sunday’s mum seizing the baby, Aishat said: “At midnight,
a day after the christening, the baby was crying, Sunday’s mum woke me; she
said I should breastfeed her. I did, but she continued to cry. I told her that
I didn’t think that it was hungry that was making the baby cry. She asked what
was making the baby cry, I didn’t say anything. The baby was still crying, and
then I fell asleep again. In the morning, she asked me to leave. She said
Sunday said I should leave and that they should lock his room. She collected
the baby from me.
“I went to
tell my mother. She took me to Sunday’s mum, when we got there; they started
beating me and my mother. It was Sunday’s sister, Iya-Grace, that beat me; I
thought she wanted to kill me. My mother was attacked and beaten by a man,
along with Sunday’s mum.”
Adijat took
over the narration: “They drove Aishat away and collected her baby from her
because, according to them, she didn’t breastfeed the baby properly. What does
Aishat know about baby and breastfeeding? Is Aishat not a child herself? I went
to Ajamgbadi Police Station to report the attack on us and the abduction of the
baby. How can anyone take a two weeks’ old baby from its mother? I was given a
policewoman at the station.
When we got
to Sunday’s house, they almost attacked the policewoman, she left. The
following day, I went back to the station, they gave me a policeman, we went
back to Sunday’s family, the same thing happened. The third time, the
Divisional Police Officer (DPO) gave us six policemen, but when we got there,
nobody was at home. The place was deserted. We left; no arrest was made.”
Adijat
didn’t know what to do next, not until a concerned trader, Mr. Michael Igbokwe,
selling in one of the shops got to hear about the alleged maltreatment and
abduction.
He took over
the matter and started frequently visiting police station on behalf of the
widow and her daughter.
Igbokwe
said: “I’m the caretaker of this plaza. I noticed that the woman and her
children used to sleep outside here every night. I noticed that the little
girl’s breasts were unusually large and dripping. I started asking questions. I
heard that her mother-in-law collected her two weeks’ old baby and sent her
packing. It was annoying.
They knew
the mother is poor and uneducated. They took advantage of the little girl. They
collected her baby. I don’t like injustice. I took them to police station.
“The family
of the man seemed to have gone into hiding; police are looking for them. In
fact, the DPO said if anyone has information that could lead to arrest and
rescue of the baby; they should come to the police station. Right now, nobody
knows what had become of the baby; whether they have sold her. One thing I
know, however, if anything happens to that baby, the whole world will hear
about it.I can bet you that!”
An Assistant
Commissioner of Police (ACP), Mr. Monday Agbonika, formerly working with Lagos
State Domestic and Sexual Violence Response Team (DSVRT), said that Sunday
ought to be arrested and charged to court for defilement, which attracts life
imprisonment under the Lagos State government law. Sunday’s mum should be
arrested for child labour, for making Aishat to hawk oranges.
The state
Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO), Olarinde Famous-Cole, disclosed that
Sunday’s mother and the baby are now with the Ojo Police Station, while the DPO
is trying to mediate in the matter.
He said:
“The case was reported at Ojo Police Station, about a girl that just had a
baby. She refused to breastfeed her baby.
The man, who
got her pregnant, had no wherewithal to take care of her. The mother-in-law now
decided to take care of the child. The lady now raised the alarm that the
mother-in-law was trying to take the baby from her.
“The matter
was taken to DPO Ojo and he had been trying to mediate and see that them both
parties came to an agreement.
But the
problem is that these people don’t have the wherewithal to take care of the
child. The girl’s mother is not ready to accept the terms and conditions given
to her by the DPO. It’s a case of negligence on both sides.”
Famous-Cole
added that information available to him was that Aishat and Sunday, failed to
take care of the baby, so the mother-in-law took over.
He added:
“One of the best ways of handling this issue is to refer them to the
government. If they can’t take care of the baby, they should give her to the
state; the state will take care of her.”
Our
correspondent had also alerted Mrs. Lola Vivour-Adeniyi, Coordinator, Lagos
State Domestic and Sexual Violence Response Team (DSVRT) of the matter.
In a text
message, Vivour-Adeniyi asked that Aishat and her mother be brought to her
office.
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