Culled from PUNCH
On
December 26, 2010, oblivious of the grave danger that lay in wait for her that
afternoon, Basirat Raimi, a 400-level student of Business Administration at the
Lagos State University at the time, was returning home from school when she
heard someone call her name.
She turned
her face backward and in that instant, she recognised the voice as that of her
estranged boyfriend, Yusuf Salau, with whom she had a child.
Salau
allegedly threw a cup of acid in the face of the woman he once loved dearly.
The
chemical destroyed much of Raimi’s face. She lost one of her eyes and had to
undergo many surgeries to save the other.
She
survived. But like many victims of this kind of vicious attack, Raimi lives
with the fear she would never be normal again.
Read more after the cut...
Her father
was a plank dealer, whose business was not doing very well. But he had to
sell everything in his shop and divert the proceeds to the care of his
daughter.
Attacks
such as this always keep members of the public wondering what could be an
appropriate punishment for those who carry them out.
One part
of Raimi’s face is completely disfigured and like other survivors of acid
attacks, she has to live with excruciating pain for a long time, not to mention
the sky-
high debt
incurred through medical bills.
Findings
by Saturday PUNCH revealed that most of the victims of acid attacks are
women.
Executive
Director of Project Alert on Violence Against Women, Dr. Josephine
Effa-Chukwuma, said her group’s research once showed that up to about 90 per
cent of victims were women.
She said,
“About five years ago, we did a study of cases and our report reflected that
about 85 to 90 percent of acid attacks were women. And at that time, it seemed
to be very common in Edo State, which was why we had to establish an advocacy
programme there.
“As far as
we are concerned, that statistics has not changed because going by the reports
in newspapers, women are still the majority of victims of the attacks. This is
because the acid used – the liquid inside batteries – is easily procurable.”
In most of
the cases, it was discovered that scorned lovers are the ones who mostly carry
out this attack.
When Raimi
spoke with our correspondent in September 2011, she said her mechanic boyfriend
was behaving badly, which was why she decided to leave him.
She said,
“I had a child for him when the going was good. My father would not allow
abortion. Even though he was a mechanic, I did not bother because I saw the
good in him.
“But later
he changed and became irresponsible. He began to get violent anytime he saw me
with a man. So, I did not want him anymore. We were not married. I lived with
my father and my child. I did not believe someone who once loved me would do
this to me.”
Raimi’s
decision to quit the relationship with Salau did not go down well with him. He
was wracked with hatred to the point of deciding to deal with who Raimi.
It will
never be known what could have driving such a man to make such a potent
chemical as his weapon of choice.
Raimi
pulled through the ordeal as numerous surgeries she undertook saved her.
Salau was
arrested, arraigned and sentenced to seven years in prison by an Ebute-Meta
Magistrate’s Court, Lagos.
Our
correspondent spoke with her on the phone on Tuesday as she was said to be out
of town.
Raimi said
she had moved on with her life.
“I am just
happy I did not lose my life in that attack. My daughter would have been
without a mother. I am even happy that at least I can see with one of my eyes.
“A lot of
people criticised me for dating Salau, being a mechanic. But an animal will act
like an animal no matter what job he does.
“I am
currently doing petty business as the my eye problem has not given me the
opportunity of living a normal life. I still need surgery on my eyes, which the
doctors at the Lagos University Teaching Hospital said will cost about
N800,000. But where will my parents get that?”
Years
after the attack, many victims who survive it continue to undergo surgeries, Saturday
PUNCH learnt. But when funds run low, victims are left with disfigured
faces.
This is
currently the situation 27-year-old Adesope Lateefah found herself after she
was bathed with acid by Alabi Olokode, a suitor she turned down.
While
Raimi’s case can be seen as one of the lucky ones, that of Lateefah was one
that drew a lot of pity.
Olokode
was a desperate man who sought the hand of Lateefah in marriage. But as he
continued to pressure her, she maintained her stand, which did not go down well
with him.
About
5.30am on December 30, 2011, as Lateefah went to say her prayers at
Tekunudeen Mosque, Aboru, Olokode, who was hiding near the mosque, poured acid
on her face.
Lateefah
lost the use of her two eyes as a result of the attack. According to her, life
has become unbearable for her since then.
“I didn’t
offend Olokode in anyway, he had been making advances at me and I refused to
date him. So, he decided to destroy my life. I cannot see again, I have no
fiancé, no child and all my dreams and aspirations seem like a fairytale,” she
was reported to have said at the time.
Policemen
attached to the Oke-Odo Division were able to arrest Olokode.
He is
still facing prosecution on the case.
On
Tuesday, our correspondent visited the vocational training centre run by the
Nigeria Society for the Blind at Oshodi, Lagos in company with her mother.
Her
attitude as she greeted our correspondent was upbeat. There was no sign of
depression in her even though both of her eyes are glued shut with a layer of
skin.
The skin
on her face ran down one side as if it melted and solidified. The acid has
disfigured the face of the young woman, who told Saturday PUNCH she once
nursed the idea of becoming a clothing businesswoman.
She said,
“How can I be depressed? I rarely even think about the boy (Olokode) anymore. I
don’t care if he goes to jail or is released because how will that bring my
sight back.
“The kind
of education we receive here has given me hope that I have a bright future. In
fact, I am not afraid of my future at all. We are taught Braille, daily living
skills, mobility, computer, typewriting and crafts. The care and love I receive
here has given me hope of a very bright future.”
Lateefah
said she now wants to be a radio presenter. When asked why, she said she fell
in love with the job because radio is the only thing that keeps her company
apart from her blind colleagues.
“Most of
the time as we lay in our beds after classes here, radio programmes are the
most interesting things that keep us company. I will like to put smiles on the
faces of people like me,” she said.
But while
a victim like Lateefah remains optimistic about her future 35-year-old Akwa
Lawson is struggling to survive with no hope for the future.
Lawson is
a male victim, who like Raimi, was attacked by someone he once loved.
He had
slept in the house of his 37-year-old fiancée, Dorothy Nkanu-Hayford, on May
20, 2012, unaware that he was in bed with a lover who would soon attack him
with such a deadly weapon.
“We slept
on the same bed together and we had not been in any fight the previous night,”
Lawson recalled.
On that
fateful day, he told our correspondent that he went to sleep over at his
fiancee’s family house in Ugep, Yakuur Local Government Area of Cross River
State, which was not strange because he had done so before.
Lawson
said, “I was going back to school the following day. I was a student of the
University of Calabar, Educational Technology Department at the time.
“I planned
to go to school from her family house the following day. We once had a little
problem weeks before that day. Someone told me my fiancée had contracted
someone to beat me up. But I was warned to stay clear of her.
“I loved
her very much and had promised not to abandon her so I reported the incident to
her family members who begged me and apologised on her behalf. I confronted her
with the accusation and we sorted out the issue.
Our life continued
normally and I thought the issue was over.”
But the
issue obviously was not because according to Lawson, Nkanu-Hayford, woke up
that morning, slipped out of the room while Lawson was on his knees saying his
morning prayer.
He
explained, “I’m a good Christian and I pray a lot. I was saying in my prayer
‘anything that was not your will, Lord, take it out of my life.’ I am not sure
whether that was what infuriated her because she did not join me in the prayer.
“When she
came back, she brought in a container and emptied the content on my head. I did
not know it was acid immediately but I realised it was eating into my skin. I
could not understand why she did it. We slept on the same bed till morning and
she emptied acid on my head. I was confused.”
While he
was screaming, Lawson was rushed to the Ugep General Hospital and later
referred to the Unversity of Calabar Teaching Hospital. His head and face were
badly damaged in the attack.
Asked what
explanation his fiancée gave after the attack, “she said I stole her N20,000,”
he answered.
Saturday
PUNCH
sought to inquire what could be the motive behind the alleged attack and called
a phone number of Nkanu-Hayford provided by Lawson, but the number did not go
through.
Life has
since become unbearable for Lawson. He told Saturday PUNCH he now lives
from hand to mouth as he had spent all he had on treatments and surgeries.
To get a
better consult, he comes to the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital,
Ikeja.
Lawson
currently needs N6m for a plastic surgery he was told will be done in India.
He said,
“I can hardly eat daily. I don’t want to be a beggar. Surviving daily has
become a great challenge. I have a friend who helps me out by providing money
once in a while. My family members are poor.
“I’m not
even concerned about whether she is prosecuted. She was arrested but later
released. I just want to be alright again.”
Attacks
such as the ones suffered by Lateefah, Raimi and Lawson made it necessary to
find out how acid is obtained. Findings by our correspondent later revealed
that it could be easily got than most people will think.
Our
correspondent approached a battery charger, who identified himself simply as
Samuel, at Agege, Lagos to buy a little quantity of acid.
Samuel
sold it at N250 per litre without any question.
Jamiu
Isola, who operates a car battery repair shop at Ogba, told our correspondent
that anytime someone comes to buy “battery water” he assumed they want to use
it in their cars.
“I sell
mine at N1,200 per gallon. What use asking people what they need the battery
water for? Even if a buyer wants to use it to attack someone, will he say so?
Anytime anybody comes here and say I want to buy battery acid to top up’ I
simply sell it,” he asked.
That is
how easy it is to buy a chemical weapon.
However,
our correspondent asked the police how the purchase of the substance can best
be controlled. The reply was that it was a responsibility that could not be
carried out by law enforcement agents alone.
Deputy
Public Relations Officer of the state command, Mr. Damascus Ozoani, said the
members of the public need to be actively involved in efforts to control the
procurement of the acid.
He
explained, “The retailers dealing in the acid or the battery chargers cannot
determine the genuine motive of those who come to them to purchase the
susbtance.
“What
happens in a situation where someone who wants to use it obtains it from his or
her own vehicle? The main thing is for every member of the public to have a
reorientation because the motive behind using acid in attacks is usually
psychological.
“The
police on its own try as much as possible to monitor known places where
batteries are charged or battery acid are sold because the procurement of some
chemicals are guided by law.”
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