
A 14-year-old girl, her 10 year old brother, and
their 42-year-old mother have all been living in a makeshift kiosk that has
seen better days in Shagari Estate in Iyana Ipaja – Ipaja, Lagos .
The trio started living in the kiosk after the Mum caught her Husband
allegedly raping her. Names of the children and mother will not be disclosed so
as to protect their identity. (Tomilola isn't the girl's real name)
The teenager was raped by her stepfather, 60-year-old Joseph Salako and were sent packing after her mom confronted him and raised the alarm.
When Punch correspondent and the Executive Director, Esther Child Rights Foundation, Mrs. Esther Ogwu, visited the woman and her children at the kiosk during the week they were in a very pitiable state.
The teenager was raped by her stepfather, 60-year-old Joseph Salako and were sent packing after her mom confronted him and raised the alarm.
When Punch correspondent and the Executive Director, Esther Child Rights Foundation, Mrs. Esther Ogwu, visited the woman and her children at the kiosk during the week they were in a very pitiable state.
Their Mum said in July 2015, she caught her
husband, Tomilola’s stepfather, moments after raping the teenager
and raised the alarm. She said reported the matter at the Gowon Estate
police station and Salako was subsequently arrested by the Police but was
released the following day because he promised to pay N50,000 for
‘damages’, a deal she was forced to accept because of the threats by
Salako’s other older children and the need to raise money to take care
of her sick children.
The Mum said she met Salako 9 years ago after she lost her
1st Husband in a motor accident. She added that her daughter and
son were suffering from sickle cell disease. She said she has an 8 year
daughter with Salako who still lives with him.
The teenage girl said her stepfather had the habit of
sleeping with her at any slight opportunity and threatened to kill her
if she told anyome about it.
She narrated:
“My mum had told me to always go and greet him anytime I got
home. So, when I came back from school, I went to greet him. I was about
leaving when he called me and said he wanted to tell me something that I must
not tell anyone.
“He said he wanted to sleep with me. I refused but before I
could run away, he carried me and took me inside. He tore my panties and ‘did
it’. I was crying because it was paining me but he didn’t stop. I tried to
shout but he covered my mouth. When he finished, he cleaned my legs and his
‘thing’ and warned me that he would kill me if I told anyone.”
She continued, “That was not the only time he did it. At
other times, he would call me and tell me to ‘suck’ him and because I usually
refused, he would slap me. Sometimes, in the midnight, he would come down from
the bed and ‘do it’ with me. If I tried to shout, he would cover my mouth and
ask if I was ready to die. I would have to endure the pain and just keep quiet.
“The day my mum saw us was the fifth time. When my mum came
in, he was already doing it but when he saw the ray of light from the torch my
mum was holding, he quickly stood up and went to block her. He would always
promise to buy me anything I needed. We had to leave because of the incident.”.
She said one of Salako’s daughters took her to the State
High Court premises at Ikeja and made her swear an affidavit that she would not
press charges.
“They took advantage of the fact that I am not literate,”
she said.
She explained that she used to have a shop in front of her
(new) husband’s house where she had a dry-cleaning job.
On the day of the incident, she said her little boy was
asleep in the shop and because of the cold, she sent her daughter to go into
their room upstairs to bring a blanket to cover the little boy, who
was sick. She said she became unsettled when the girl did not return on time.
She continued, “I was waiting for her to return with the
cloth so I could cover her brother, but when I didn’t see her, I took my torch
and went upstairs to see why it was taking her too long. When I entered the sitting
room, the other children had slept and everywhere was quiet.
“So, I went towards the room and suddenly, my husband came
out of the room naked and blocked the entrance with his hands. I asked him why
he was blocking me but instead of answering me, he asked what I was looking
for. So, I passed under his hand to see what was happening. To my greatest
surprise, I found my daughter also naked on the floor. I saw my daughter’s
panties close to the entrance. When I asked her what happened, she was about
explaining when he slapped her and told her to keep quiet. I couldn’t hold it
to myself, so I screamed and started shouting.
“His other children then came out and told me not to make
noise about it so I wouldn’t disgrace their father, but I couldn’t keep it to myself.
I slept in the shop with the two of them that night.” After series of threats
from Salako’s children, some neighbours who later learnt about the incident,
advised her to make a formal report at the police station two weeks later.
“I went to report at the Gowon Estate Police Division.
Because of the way the man always pestered me for sex, I used to pray that God
should help me so he could reduce his demands. So when he stopped asking, I
thought my prayer had been answered not knowing that he had transferred his
urge to my daughter.
“I didn’t know he could do that to my child even when he is
not the father. This is the man I was married to for nine years. These days,
anytime I come across him or his children, they keep threatening me.”
Stuck in frustration and utter depression, Felicia has been
taking care of her children with the little money she gets when she helps
people to wash their clothes, which she does occasionally.
“I’m willing to work but there is none,” she said. Tomilola
has also been helping in sustaining the family with the little she earns from a
canteen where she washes plates.
The Mum said Salako had been persuading her to come back
home but she hasn't relented in her resolve not to go back to him.
She said her 2 children are very sick and are in
obvious need of urgent help and have not been able to go to school because of
their situation.
While they continue to live in the unsafe kiosk, which is open to the severe weather conditions that SS patients should not be exposed to, Salako has remained a free man.
While they continue to live in the unsafe kiosk, which is open to the severe weather conditions that SS patients should not be exposed to, Salako has remained a free man.
When Punch correspondent and Ogwu visited Salako's
house around Akinogun Bus Stop in Shagari Estate, a short distance from where
Felicia now lives, he explained that Felicia moved out of the house for no
reason known to him, saying he had been calling her to come back home. When
asked about his arrest by the police, he admitted that he was arrested but
refused to disclose the reason.
“As I’m speaking to you, I don’t know where she is. I didn’t
do anything to her daughter. The money I’m paying to the police is the money
she asked from me sometime ago. I’ve paid her N25,000 already,” he said.
Ogwu contacted the police to revisit the case and
prosecute the suspect accordingly. She said:
“Rape is a crime, regardless of what the complainant says.
That woman was helpless and she must have taken that decision under pressure,
because she doesn’t have anybody to help her. We want people to help her
because she really needs help, more so for the sake of her children.”
The Divisional Police Officer, Gowon Estate Police Station,
CSP Festus Otabor, explained that the police had yet to find sufficient
evidence to prosecute the suspect, adding that the woman had sworn to an
affidavit not to press charges against her husband since there was no enough
evidence to validate the allegation.
“When they came here, the woman was crying and begging us
not to take him to court. So, now if she wants us to do that, she should come
to us and we will look into it, but the test result didn’t produce sufficient
evidence,” he added.
Punch






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