This baby was thrown into the Lagos lagoon by his father , a naval rating against the wish of his wife , www.odogwublog.com brings you the gist....................
Almost three years after her baby was callously thrown into the Lagos
lagoon, by the naval rating that impregnated her in the course of a short-lived
marriage, Glory Yusuf, has opened up on the horrible experience.
For nine long months, Glory bore the pain and stress of pregnancy. Like
every other woman expecting her first child, she had great expectations for her
unborn child. On the day of her baby’s birth, she struggled to stay alive for
her child.
Even when the pain of childbirth overwhelmed her body, she still managed
to heed all the instructions from the healthcare givers who helped with the
labour.
Finally, Glory pushed out her child into the world. It was a bouncing
baby girl! There was joy in her heart and immediately, the pains started to
recede.
Eight days after, she staged a naming ceremony during which she named
her bundle of joy Happiness. No doubt, she expected that the girl would become
for her a source of unending happiness.
The only person who was not happy with the birth of Happiness was her
own father, Moses Joseph, a naval rating. Few days after Happiness was born,
her father came for her, but not with love in his eyes. He came with a sneaking
determination to commit murder.
After two failed attempts at getting the baby from the mother, Joseph
resorted to taking the law into his own hands. He hired thugs, went after the
mother of the child with arms and eventually snatched her from its mother.
The incident happened in the dark hours of February 2, 2012 at the
Boundary Ajegunle area of Lagos. The baby was just two weeks old.
Sunday Sun met with the young woman
recently, and discovered rather painfully that the man who had bagged a 10-year
jail term following a court-martial by the Nigerian Navy has since been set
free.
That sobering fact just added to the pain of the mother of the victim
who told our reporter that she is yet to find rest ever since the brutal end of
her baby’s life.
With pain in her eyes, Glory struggled to recall the story as it happened.
“He came to my house after the naming ceremony and demanded for the baby. I
refused because I didn’t know what he wanted to do with a one-week-old baby.
“He then told me that he wanted to take the baby to the motherless
babies home. And I was like ‘God forbid, how can you take my baby to a
motherless babies home when I am still alive?’ I refused to let him take the
baby that day and he fought me.”
Glory conceived Happiness in the course of an inchoate marital relationship.
Trouble started after Glory discovered that Joseph was married and had lied to
her about his status. It happened while her pregnancy was approaching five
months. A woman visited the couple with two children.
Joseph had told Glory that the woman was his late brother’s wife and that
she had come to beg for school fees for the children. She swallowed the story
hook, line and sinker.
Three days after, she discovered that the woman was actually Joseph’s
wife and the children, the fruits of his union with her. When she demanded an
explanation, the man told her to abort her pregnancy now that she knows about
his marriage.
Since she was not given to abortion, Glory left the house and struggled
her way through the pregnancy. It was surprising to have Joseph making a
demand for the child after he had asked her to terminate it.
Continuing her narration, Glory said that in his efforts to have the
child, Joseph beat her to a coma and seized the child.
“I did not even know when he took the baby away. It was even my neighours
that ran after him and took the baby from him. They told him that he couldn’t
take away such a young baby like that from its mother. When I woke up, they
gave me my baby and told me what had happened. I was so grateful to them. After
that, I called my mother and told her that the father of my baby wanted to take
the child from me. And she then promised to come to Lagos from our state, Kogi.
“The very day my mother entered Lagos was the second time the man came
back for the child. After greeting my mother, he said he wanted to take the
baby. My mother was very angry with him. She asked him what he wanted to do
with a week-old baby and if something was wrong with him. After quarrelling
with my mother, he promised to come back for the child. In my mind, I thought
that he would come back the way he had been coming. But the night he came back,
he came with about eight-armed men around 3:00am.
“They pointed a gun at me and demanded for the baby. But I refused to
give them the child. Then they knocked my mother down and said they were going
to shoot me if I didn’t give them the baby. Then my mother started begging me
to give them the child since it was the father of the baby that is asking for
her. At a point I had to let them take the baby and they went off with her. As
they were leaving, I started shouting and ran after them. That was when I saw
the father of my baby outside with those boys. He didn’t enter the room with
them. They started their bikes and left.
“Then I ran inside, took my phone and started calling him to return my
baby, but his number was not going through. I kept trying the number till
4:00am, but it was not going through. So, I ran to their barracks. When the
gateman saw me crying, he asked what the matter was and I told him. He said the
matter was beyond him, that he would take me to the barracks chief. After
hearing my story, the barracks chief asked me if I was sure of what I just
told him and I said yes. Then he asked them to call the man.
“When they called him, he said he was at Boundary where his baby was
stolen. The barracks chief then ordered him back to the barracks. When he got
there, I held him and begged him to return my baby, but he denied knowledge of
the incident. He was even telling me to go and look for his baby. The barracks
chief then asked me again and I told him that I was sure the man came with the
people that took my baby. In fact, if I see the very man that took the baby
from me I can still recognize him. The barracks chief then took us to Navy
Town.
“When we got to the town, the man was still denying. So, they said they
would take the matter to the overall oga upstairs, so that the oga will
ask the man the question himself. As they were going, the father of my baby
gave his phones and N17,000 to one Hausa boy that has been following us. He
told the boy that he was expecting a call from the mother of his children; that
when she calls he should direct her to the Navy Town and give her the money. As
they were going up, one of the phones started ringing. When the boy picked it,
one of the boys who snatched the baby from me was heard saying: oga,
where are you now? We are at Marine Beach waiting, but you are not here. Come
and settle us now.’
“The boy cut the call, took the phone to a military police officer that
was also there and reported what he heard. The officer then took the phone from
him and called the boys back and started speaking Hausa to them. When he asked
who they were, the boys became angry and were like: ‘So, you don’t know us
again. We followed you to your girlfriend’s house to take your baby. Now, you
don’t know who we are.’
“As a result of that phone call, they did not take him up again.
Instead, they put the man in a vehicle and with some other military police
officers and drove him to the Marine Beach. When they got there, they called
back the number and that was where they arrested two of those boys; Ilaya and
Bello. After they were questioned, the boys explained how they collected the
baby and that when they left my house; they had put the baby in an Indomie
carton and thrown her into the lagoon. When they said that, I was shattered. I
was crying; that they should go into the water and get my baby. Even if it was
her corpse; that I wanted to see my baby again,” she said amid tears.
By this time, Glory was fighting hard to keep the tears away, but without
much success. You could see a woman who has been through a lot in one lifetime.
Following that revelation, the woman said the Nigerian Navy promised to
handle the matter. “After the trial, they told me that they sentenced the man
to 10 years imprisonment; and that the case was over. I could not believe it,
but because I did not have anybody that would support me, I just left the
matter in God’s hands,” Glory said.
As if that was not enough, Glory claimed that not long after the jail
term was handed down, she started seeing the same man who killed her child.
“It was not up to six months when I started to see him. The first time,
I saw him at Airways Bus Stop here in Apapa as I was going to CMS. He was on
bike and in Navy uniform. Another time, I saw him at Ajegunle in the night. He
was wearing only the Navy beret. Even as at December, I still saw him.”
Glory, who said she would like to move on with her life, told our reporter
that she could not find rest until justice was served in the murder of her
infant daughter. “Every time I remember the things I went through having that
baby, I just want to die. I am tired. I can’t even sleep at night. I am
worried,” she said, fighting back the tears.
Following the incident, Glory said she lost the job she was doing on Lagos
Island because she was always going from one place to another in search of
justice. The court case was also taking much of her time and as a result, her
employer disengaged her.
So, right now, she is struggling to eke out a living with no tangible
source of livelihood. But uppermost in her mind is her desire to ensure that
the killer of her child is duly brought to book. “Nobody has the right to take
away the life of my child like that. It is God that created her and I am sure
that he has a purpose for her life. I just want her killer to face the full
weight of the law.” Before the Navy took up the matter, Access to Justice had
commenced a Coroner’s inquest into the death of the infant. But on the request
of the Navy, the matter was discontinued at the time.
So, in its reaction to the release of the Naval rating, the NGO said the
action was highly condemnable. “It is distressing to discover that, less than
two years after Joseph was sentenced by the Naval Court Martial, he has since
been walking the streets a free man in uniform having been released on the
basis of an alleged administrative review by the Navy for which the decease’s
mother, Miss Glory Yusuf was never notified.
“This so called administrative release of the Naval Rating is a cause
for grave concern as it is bewildering to imagine that the Nigerian Navy could
release a man whose conduct was so barbaric and inhumane when he had not served
out his jail term.
“What is worse is that Mr. Joseph still retains his employment as a service
man within the Nigerian Navy despite the guilty verdict handed down by the
Court Martial. This action by the Nigerian Navy clearly demonstrates its
disregard for human life, particularly the life of the two weeks old innocent
child that was intentionally taken away by her own father.
“Access to Justice is concerned that this action by the Nigerian Navy
sends negative indications to the public that naval officers responsible for
any criminal act against civilians can easily escape the arm of justice under
administrative guise and be fully rewarded thereafter with the retention of
their stewardship.
The body called on the Lagos State Government, the Attorney General of
Lagos State and stakeholders in the justice sector “to demonstrate their
commitment to enhancing respect for human life by immediately taking steps to
inquire into the circumstances of the naval rating’s release to demonstrate
that the state government would not condone or tolerate law enforcement
agents’ arbitrariness and abuse of civilian’s rights,” the statement read in
part.
Written
by Patience Egwuwa
This baby was thrown into the Lagos Lagoon as mother seeks Justice
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Sunday, January 25, 2015
Rating:
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Sunday, January 25, 2015
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