By SUNDAY ANI (nichsunny@yahoo.com)
Men of the Nigeria Police, Lagos State Command, Ikeja,
have set their brains cracking to unravel the mystery man who defiled a two-year-old
baby in her school. The case was transferred to the Commissioner of Police, X
Squad, Unit D, State Headquarters, Ikeja from the Ajamgbadi Police Station
where it was initially reported.
The two-year old only child was discovered by her
mother to have been defiled after she was brought back from school by the
school bus. According to the baby’s mother, Mrs Okoye, her baby attends
Salvation Nursery/Primary School, Shibiri, where she pays as high as N17, 800
per term. She said she would always take her to school while the school bus
dropped her at home after school hours. That, according to her, has been the
routine, but on that fateful Tuesday, July 16, she discovered to her amazement blood
stains in the baby’s private parts, after the school bus had dropped her and
left.
With the blood stains all over the baby’s private part
and her sudden relapse to sleep that afternoon, it became clear to her mother
that an adult male had defiled her. She shouted and rushed out to get the driver
who brought her home to explain what happened but the driver had zoomed off.
Her voice attracted neighbours who came and saw what happened to the baby.
What she did
In her bid to get somebody to explain to her what
could have happened to her baby, she said: “I rushed to a neighbour whose son also
attends the same school to get the headmaster’s telephone number. Before then,
I had called her teacher, whose phone was switched off. I was advised to go to
hospital for a medical test. I went to a nearby private hospital, Vineyard Hospital,
at the back of Shibiri bus-stop. When the doctor saw it, he said that without a
police report, he would not do anything. We went back to the school but we
didn’t see anybody. I met only two gatemen and also saw the bus where it had
been packed. The gatemen called the headmaster and they spoke in Yoruba. He later
told me he was somewhere but I told him that I would only give him 10 minutes
to get to the school, after which I would report the matter to any police
station for his arrest. At that point, he flared up, and even questioned if
that was the way I talked to people.”
So, with the unsatisfactory response from the
headmaster, she said: “I reported the case at the Shibiri Police Station; I was
given a written note but when I went back to the hospital, the doctor said that
the written note was not enough for him to lay his hands on my baby. He advised
me to go to Ajamgbadi Police Station to get a proper police report. When I reported
at Ajangbadi, I was told to write my statement, after which the Investigating Police
Officer (IPO) told me that they would go to the school the next day, Wednesday
July 17, to arrest the headmaster, the teacher, the driver and the cleaner.
They gave me a note to the General Hospital, Igando, but I couldn’t go there
that day because it was late then.”
Back to Igando General
Hospital
Narrating her difficulty at getting the baby examined
and the medical report given to her for further investigation, she said: “After
the doctor had examined my baby, he shouted in utter amazement at such
wickedness but said only the baby’s early morning urine would help to unravel
what actually happened since I had bathed the baby. I went there the following
day, Friday July 19, with her early morning urine but the doctor said I was
late; he insisted I must be there by 8am at most. So, he asked me to come back
again on Saturday July 20.”
Mrs Okoye
revealed that she dressed her baby on pants on the fateful day but lamented
that the pants was not on her when she noticed the blood in her private part.
She also revealed that as at Thursday, July 18, only the driver was being held
by the police at Ajamgbadi; the other three- the headmaster, the teacher and
the cleaner had all been released on bail.
Asked what the statement of the school authority was,
she said she had no idea but admitted that they wrote their own statement.
Result of the medical report
Eventually, a medical diagnosis was carried out on the
baby’s early morning urine at the General Hodpital, Igando and from the report it
is obvious that the baby’s hymen had been broken. The report among other
technical terminologies stated, “No active bleeding. Hymen is breached.” In
other words, there was a forceful entry into the baby’s private part either by
a male organ or an adult finger or whatever, which has been the basis for
suspicion. So, the question that remains unanswered now is: “Who defiled baby
Favour? What actually happened to her? And where were the school authorities
under whose care the baby was entrusted when she was brutally assaulted and
defiled?” These and many more nagging questions are what the crack team of the
Nigeria Police officers at the State Headquarters, Ikeja, where the case had
been transferred to are working tirelessly to provide adequate answers to.
Headmaster reacts
When the headmaster of the school, Mr Owoyemi Taiwo
was contacted on phone, he declined comment. He said that the matter was
already at the Lagos State Police Headquarters, Ikeja where it was being
investigated and that it would not be proper for him to say anything on the
matter until after the police investigation was concluded. He also promised to
narrate all he knew about the incident to our reporter as soon as the police
investigation was concluded.
Police angle
Speaking on the matter, the Investigating Police
Officer, simply identified as Bose confirmed that the case was at their desk at
the Escort Section of the Commissioner of Police, X Squad, Unit D, State Police
Command, Ikeja. She asked our reporter to visit their office to see her boss
but when our reporter insisted that he only wanted to know the position of the
case, she said it was still under investigation.
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