President of Uma Ukpai Evangelistic Association Inc., Evangelist Uma Ukpai, spoke with ...
President
of Uma Ukpai Evangelistic Association Inc., Evangelist Uma Ukpai, spoke
with Sunday Oguntola on how the renowned ministry has been affecting
lives in the last 42 years. Excerpts:
Your fellowship yesterday was on helping the poor among the poorest. Why did you take up that issue?
Our society is getting to a place where
we are becoming a selfish community and we are unfeeling to the less
privileged among us. We have become political lepers. A leper feels no
pains or feelings for others.
A selfish community will have the demon
of greed rule but our God blesses people so that each man may protect
the weak around him, cover the naked and feed the poor. God blesses us
so that we can bless people.
God is an insightful, strategic planner.
He blesses us so that we can bring the mad out of the roads into a
place of dignity. The bible teaches that whoever helps the poor has
given loan to the poor and God is committed to paying back with
interests.
Worship that does not involve helping
the poor is a waste of time. When you give to the poor, your light
begins to shine. You see what others cannot see; you see what others see
but see hidden treasures. He will let you see gold in a trash.
God is in the love with the poor for
reasons that I cannot say. When we mock the poor, we are mocking God.
Every poor person you see around is a gateway to financial blessings and
relevance.
How far has the ministry exemplified this?
For more than 30 years, we run a free
medical outreach. There was a time I was giving all the South East
states N10million worth of drugs every year. I did this for over 15
years. I used to have a team of 23 medical doctors from overseas with
drugs worth N50million a year.
I will bring nurses, pharmacists and
doctors for the outreach. I have also sited a hospital in my village 15
years ago. Those in villages are so hopelessly poor that no one can make
money off them. We now have an eye hospital with six doctors full-time.
It is called Uma Ukpai Eye Centre. I send make-up from here regularly
to make the hospital run.
We partner with ophthalmologists
overseas that can be part of surgeries via internet should the doctors
run into trouble. They now when they run out of salaries, they can run
back to me for make-up. I have done this for 18 years.
It is called King of Kings Specialist
Hospital. It serves the people in Abia, Akwa Ibom and Cross Rivers
States. I have tarred the streets to the two hospitals.
What is the scholarship scheme all about?
It is a scheme for 102 undergraduates
that run for five years. Once a student is taken in, it runs for five
years. There are 102 beneficiaries on board. They are students from
UNIUYO. I don’t even know them or where they come from. My job is to
make the money available every year. Also, half of the students in our
Bible School are on scholarship.
How about the widows’ support scheme?
It is not a permanent feature but we do
it from day to day. I don’t feel comfortable talking about all we do for
widows. This morning, we just sent N200, 000 to a widow whose police
husband was killed recently.
You are working on a Polytechnic. Tell us about it.
The Polytechnics is on 350 plots of land
and the community has just given me 250 additional plots. I intend to
erect College of Agriculture for girls. I want to show them how to turn
one goat into 20 in one year; one ram into 20; one pig into 100 in one
year.
Women are humble enough for that kind of
training. I want our girls to marry out of love, not out of financial
pressure. Our women do not need to depend on anybody even when they are
married. The Polytechnic is taking off by September. We are offering
Electrical Engineering, Computer Engineering, Computer Science,
Statistics and Accounting. I intend to have a research centre at the
Polytechnics.
If you notice, we are a consuming
nation; we have not been part of human inventions. All the cars we drive
are imported; same as our generators and phones. I believe we should be
part of the competition, not just consuming. We can create whatever
others have created.
You always encourage people to give. Why is that?
Everybody has to give to somebody who is
poorer. You cannot be the poorest around. If you are a maid in my
house, you have a chance of going to the university if you choose to. We
will pay your way to university education. About 45 people have passed
through us. One is a medical doctor while another is a lawyer. There are
many others like that. I believe every help to the poor is a loan to
God.
Where do you get the resources for all these projects considering that you don’t draw tithes and offering like churches?
That is a question I cannot answer
because truly I don’t know myself. My wife has been asking me to tell
her where I get money from and I say, ‘at least we sleep on the same bed
every day and so I am not an armed robber.’
But you will be amazed somebody will
just call and say, ‘God has told me to lodge N10million into your
account for the next 20 years. Check your account because I have paid
for the first three years.’
And when I want to know the identity, most of the times they say don’t worry about that.
How do you feel when some churches and leaders do not engage in CSR?
It all depends on their backgrounds. I
lost my father at the age of 10 and my mother was sick for five years.
My uncle drove me away in 1958 when the governor visited school. He
asked us, the best three students in the school, what we will be in the
future.
I said I will be a preacher, the other
said he will be a doctor and the third said he will succeed the
governor. To be prominent at that age and asked to answer the governor
gave my uncle the hope I will ask for a high-sounding pursuit. So, he
sent me away in anger. He said I had no drive and will not waste money
on me. He asked me to show him a preacher with good car.
So, I know what it means to lose a
father and be a father from that age. I know what it is to save money to
pay school fees. I paid my way to schools. So, I have feelings for the
poor. I learnt early enough to know that Satan throws at you can become
stepping stones. For me, it is a lifelong commitment; I have signed up
to help the poor for the rest of my life.
Church facing threat of false indoctrination – Ademowo
Rev. Adebola Ademowo
Ramon Oladimeji
The Diocesan Bishop of Lagos, Rev. Adebola Ademowo, says
proliferation of churches with attendant spread of false doctrines has
become a major source of concern to the Christian faith.
As opposed to the virtues handed down by Christ, Ademola lamented
that homosexuality, ‘prosperity gospel’, teenage pregnancies, high rate
of divorce, ‘political correctness’ and corruption had become the order
of the day among Christians.
The Dean Emeritus of the Church of Nigeria, Anglican Communion,
therefore, said there was a need for well-meaning individuals and people
with high moral standards to rise up “and swim against these tides of
unwholesomeness.”
Ademola made this call on Thursday while briefing pressmen in Lagos
on the events lined up for the first session of the 33rd Synod of the
Diocese of Lagos.
The Synod with the theme, “Marks of the Church,” is scheduled to hold between Sunday, May 1 and Thursday, May 5, 2016.
It will kick off at 4pm on May 1 with an opening service holding at
the Cathedral Church of Christ, Marina, Lagos and followed on May 2 by
the official opening service where the Lagos State Governor, Akinwunmi
Ambode, would be giving an address.
Ademola said the choice of “Marks of the Church,” as the theme of the
33rd Synod’s was to reiterate that “the Diocese of Lagos and the Church
of Nigeria (Anglican Communion) will continue to stand for the biblical
orthodoxy and remain unrelenting in its advocacy” in the face of false
doctrines proliferation.
“We are today living in an age in which there is little commitment to
anything or anyone. We are daily witnesses to the challenges of
deviations from the peregrinations totally different from what Christ,
the early church fathers and political builders of our nation state shed
their blood to build and laid down their lives to preserve,” he said.
He also described the Synod theme as “a fearless call, made in love,
for all of Christendom to uphold the sanctity of God’s word as
encapsulated by the works and practices of the early church and fathers
which have now been committed to all of us.”
He said the timing of the programme was strategic as it was close to
the first inauguration anniversary of the “Muhammadu Buhari/Yemi
Osinbajo administration; and we shall be turning to our awesome God for
His intervention.”
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Left to die: Tales of woe from Nigerian children branded ‘witches’
Ekong and Mary (before rescue)
ARUKAINO UMUKORO,
in the first part of a two-part series, writes about the tradition of
branding children witches in Akwa Ibom and Cross River states in Nigeria
It was plain murder at sunset. The
heart-rending screams of 10-year-old Effiong Ita-Freddy shattered the
uneasy peace in Atakidiang Ebughu, a sleepy community in Mbo Local
Government Area of Akwa Ibom state.
About 20 members of the same family
gathered together inside the family compound to watch the gory
spectacle; the continued trial of a young boy who had been sentenced to
death.
Before then, the boy was tortured for
several days, beaten with sticks and cutlasses, until several parts of
his body bled. They ignored his cry for help and mercy.
For them, his crime was too abominable
to forgive — he was accused by his family members of being a witch. They
claimed that his witchcraft had caused the deaths of two family
members, as well as the sickness of some of his siblings.
After eking out his final confession on
that fateful day in late 2010, his family members gathered to watch him
die. They gave him ‘esere,’ a poisonous bean-like seed which is usually
found in deep forests. Its poison damages the liver and body organs, and
inflicts a violent death on the person.
SUNDAY PUNCH gathered that
‘esere’ is administered to a person suspected of witchcraft. It is a
long-standing tradition among people in the southern part of Nigeria,
particularly in Akwa Ibom State, where it is rife in Oron nation, the
third largest ethnic group in the predominantly Christian state.
Ekong (now), Mary (now)
They believe the death or survival of anyone who ate ‘esere’ was confirmation that the person was a witch or not.
Effiong finally slumped and died in excruciating pains while his family watched; some with glee, others with pity.
Witnesses to murder, tales of torture
When confronted with the allegation of
murder, Effiong’s mother and relatives could not deny it. One of his
uncles said the boy had confessed to being a witch and that he was
responsible for the sicknesses of his family members.
His mother had a look of guilt and
helplessness on her face as she bowed her head, when our correspondent
asked why she would allow any of her children go through such torture
until he died.
When our correspondent visited the
Ita-Freddy’s house, Effiong’s elder brother, Edet, now 25-years old,
said his brother had confessed to being a witch.
“The whole family came together as
witnesses to his confession. I was there too, but I couldn’t do anything
about it then because I was still young. Effiong said the first wife of
my late father ‘gave’ him the witchcraft, and then he also passed on
the spell to his three other siblings.”
The younger siblings are Grace, 11; Williams, 8; and Victoria, 5.
Not able to bear the pain of watching
her other children suffer or face the same end like Effiong; the mother
finally summoned courage and sought for the help of a chief in one of
the nearby communities. The chief housed the children for a few months,
until they were rescued by a non-governmental organisation in Uyo, in
2014.
Last week, when SUNDAY PUNCH
met the three siblings in Uyo, the Akwa Ibom State capital, they were
still traumatised by witnessing their brother’s murder six years ago.
Iyanam (Before rescure), Iyanam (right) and Ulu (now)
Grace, the eldest, said, “They beat us
every day with sticks and cutlasses for several weeks. They said we were
the ones that killed our family members and caused their sicknesses.
Sometimes, some people in the village called scouts would use cigarettes
to burn my face. They would also beat me.”
‘Scouts’ is a term for a group of
fearsome boys in the community who are assigned to mete out to jungle
justice to anyone confirmed of being a witch.
“They wanted to cut my ear. They dragged
me on the floor for long, forcing me to confess to being a witch. They
said they were going to kill me if I didn’t confess. I still remember
the spot where my brother was buried after he was killed,” she said. Not
able to stomach the memory, Grace then broke into tears.
Williams did not say much. He gazed into space and looked at his siblings with wandering eyes.
“They gave my brother something to drink and he died,” Victoria, the youngest, could only say in a shaky voice.
Just like the Ita-Freddys’, six-year-old
Iyanam Okon Iyanam, and seven-year-old Ulu Okon Iyanam are siblings
also rescued from torture after their family accused them of being
witches in 2014.
Following the accusation, the siblings were tortured for days, leaving Iyanam with a broken left arm.
Iyanam, who likes Diego Costa and
Willian of English Premiership side, Chelsea, may never get to play
professional football in future as he wishes. This is because the injury
was so severe that a medical operation could not fix the young boy’s
arm. Scarred for life, Iyanam’s arm remains bent till this day. Unlike
his elder brother, Iyanam is a boy of few words; he is still suspicious
of people, aside from those he has come to know in the shelter for
children like him.
Victoria, Grace and Williams (during rescue), Grace, Victoria and Williams (now)
SUNDAY PUNCH spoke to several
children accused of witchcraft in Uyo, and Calabar, Cross River State.
Their stories had similar refrain: horror, pain, torture and agony. Many
of them still live with the tell-tale signs; physically, emotionally
and psychologically.
Mary Odion, 11, and Ekong Asua, 12, were
also rescued last year from the dungeon of being branded as child
witches. The homes of both children were a few hundred metres apart in
Okobo Local Government Area in Akwa Ibom State. They were both accused
by their parents of being witches.
Mary was branded a witch after her uncle fell sick and later died of an illness suspected to be HIV/AIDS.
She said, “I was accused of killing him
with my witchcraft. I don’t know what being a witch is. I remember then
how many people in my family and community always beat me. They wanted
to kill me. They beat me with cutlasses and cut my buttocks with knives.
I lost consciousness and found myself in the bush. My parents thought I
was already dead when they threw me out of the house. But I lived
inside the market for two months. Some traders used to buy garri
for me to eat sometimes. At other times, I would go hungry for several
days because I could not find food to eat; I cried a lot during such
times.”
Following the death of his parents, Asua
was also accused of being a witch by her uncles that claimed a prophet
had told them she was responsible for the deaths. “I said I did not know
anything about it, but they did not believe me, they tied my hands and
beat me with sticks and said I should confess. After beating me, they
took me to the bush and left me there. That was where I met Mary. We
lived together on the streets and market for months,” she said.
Child witches epidemic: like Uyo, like Calabar
Our correspondent discovered that the practice of branding innocent children as child witches
is also common in Calabar. This is despite the fact that Cross River
adapted the Child Rights Act 2003, which is called the Cross River Child
Rights Law 2009. The law prohibits stigmatisation of any child,
including those branded as witches or wizards.
The journey from Uyo to Calabar took about three hours due to the bad road.
Victor Emmanuel, 11, told SUNDAY PUNCH
that he was lucky to survive the ordeal of being labelled a witch by
his family. According to him, he was beaten several times by his
grandmother.
“We lived in a village in Calabar. My
grandmother accused me of being the one that was preventing her from
making profit from her trade. I was beaten and given a scar on my head
with a small knife to make me confess that I was a witch. I lived on the
streets for four years,” Emmanuel told SUNDAY PUNCH, showing the knife scar on his head.
Like Emmanuel, 12-year-old Lawrence
Sylvester also had a close shave with death after he was branded a witch
by his parents. “We used to stay in Ikoransa in Calabar. My father
called me a witch and started beating me after I was taken to visit a
prophet. They said it was my paternal grandmother that gave me the
witchcraft. I was injured several times from the beatings my father gave
me with wires and different objects. There was a time my dad used a
pestle used in pounding yam to beat me until the pestle broke into two,”
he said, almost in tears.
Sylvester noted that many people in the
community also called him a witch until he was driven away from home by
his parents. “But I am not a witch. I would like to become a pastor
because I would like to correct them and help young children like me in
future,” he added.
Similarly, Clement Okon was sent packing
after people in his community in Calabar South branded him a witch.
Despite his age, 12-year-old Okon is a primary one pupil. But he would
never have had the privilege of an education or a place to call home
were it not for the help of Good Samaritans.
He told our correspondent how he used to
pick food from the dustbins on the streets for years so as to survive.
“Other big boys on the street used to beat me up and collect my money
from rubber sales. I almost died,” he said.
Other children like 12-year-old Nsikat
Monday and 11-year-old Victor Udom also had tales of horror to tell.
Both lived on the streets of Calabar for several years, since they were
aged five and four respectively, until recently, when they were taken
off the streets by an NGO.
Udom was injured with a cutlass by his
father on one occasion; while Monday survived an accident after being
thrown into the streets.
Some of the parents/guardians of these children had gone into hiding when SUNDAY PUNCH tried to contact them.
‘Suffer not a witch to live’
Hope (before rescue), Hope (now)
Edidiong Ben was 16 when his father,
Bassey, a pastor in one of the Pentecostal churches in Uquo, Esit-Eket,
accused him and his crippled, epileptic brother of being witches.
The father allegedly claimed that both
children were responsible for the low turnout of worshippers in his
church, as well as the poor sales from his local gin business.
Branding Edidiong’s crippled brother as
the ‘small demon,’ the father reportedly ordered him out of the house,
and into the rain. Edidiong said as his crippled brother struggled to
leave the house through the backyard, their father, in a fit of fury,
held him by the arm and flung him into the rain, and into a water-filled
ditch outside. Unable to help himself out of the ditch, the boy was
left to drown until he died.
After the incident, one morning,
Edidiong’s step mother reportedly woke up saying she had a nightmare
where she saw him chasing her with a machete. The father did not need
any more confirmation of his son’s alleged ‘wizardry.’ He then
reportedly tied Edidiong’s hands and feet and suspended him upside down
from the roof of the house, and used horsewhips to torture him for over
two hours until the rope suspending him from the roof cut off.
In excruciating pains, Edidiong managed
to crawl out of the ‘torture room’ until he saw a neighbour who heard
his loud cries for help.
He lived in the open with other children
at Uquo junction for months, under harsh conditions, until he was
rescued by Child’s Right and Rehabilitation Network NGO a few years ago.
The Founder and Director, CRARN, Mr. Sam Itauma, remembered the incident vividly.
“In 2009, following a petition by CRARN,
Edidiong’s father was arrested by the police alongside other five
parents who labelled their children as witches and tortured them. They
were later released without being charged to court due to the pressure
by members of the community and the church members’ pressure.”
Itauma said Edidiong was taken back to
his father in 2012 but was driven out of the house a few days later.
“When he came to the CRARN Children Centre, he narrated his ordeal to
us, albeit incoherently. He said he was later picked up by an unknown
person who took him to Kaduna State where he served as a houseboy. He
needs psychiatric care.”
A lawyer and Secretary, Basic Rights
Counsel, Calabar, Cross River State, Mr. James Ibor, said the lack of
education, poverty and high rate of unemployment were key factors to
children being branded as witches by their parents or communities.
He said, “When people are poor and
uneducated, they are easily persuaded by sometimes fraudulent pastors
that keep them captive by branding their children witches. Tune in to
the television and you will hear some pastors say ‘suffer not a witch to
live.’ This is wrong.”
A UNICEF report, Children Accused of
Witchcraft: An anthropological study of contemporary practices in
Africa, noted that ‘children accused of witchcraft are subject to
psychological and physical violence, first by family members and their
circle of friends, then by church pastors or traditional healers.’
The report noted that, “Once accused of
witchcraft, children are stigmatised and discriminated for life.
Increasingly vulnerable and caught in a cycle of accusation, they risk
yet further accusations of witchcraft. Children accused of witchcraft
may be killed, although more often they are abandoned by their parents
and live on the street. A large number of street children have been
accused of witchcraft within the family circle. These children are more
vulnerable to physical and sexual violence and to abuse by the
authorities. In order to survive and to escape appalling living
conditions, they use drugs and alcohol. Often victims of sexual
exploitation, they are at increased risk of exposure to sexually
transmitted diseases and HIV infection.”
The report also stated that the belief
in witchcraft is widespread across sub-Saharan African countries, adding
that, “Far from fading away, these social and cultural representations
have been maintained and transformed in order to adapt to contemporary
contexts.”
Ibor added that Nollywood movies have
also contributed to the phenomenon and stigmatisation of ‘child
witches,’ with popular movies sometimes depicting children as witches
who could possess supernatural powers that could harm others.
‘Hope’ for child witches
Two-year-old Hope, like his name signifies, is the embodiment of the power of faith in life and destiny.
He stretched forth his hands to be hugged when our correspondent met with him.
Picked up from the streets on January
30, Hope was abandoned for more than eight months somewhere in Ikeya, in
Okobo LGA, Akwa Ibom State, and left to the mercy of the weather and
passers-by.
The Founder and Executive Director, African Children’s Aid, Education and Development, Uyo, Mr. David Emmanuel Umeh, told SUNDAY PUNCH they had been doubtful about the child’s survival.
“His condition was very critical; he had
worms and severe kwashiorkor. His health complications also affected
his private part and ability to urinate. Because of malnutrition he was
also lacking important nutrients a typical growing child need for the
brain to develop properly. But thankfully, from the diagnosis, nothing
is wrong with his brain. With constant feeding, he will develop
normally.”
Danish Anja Ringgren Lovén, a co-founder
of ACAEDF, said some of the youngest boys at the children’s centre were
always around Hope, noting that “they always play with him and protect
him like he was a brother.”
“All our children have all gone through
the exact same abandonment and torture like Hope. And for me to see how
all of our children take such good care of each other is simply
breath-taking and really shows the hard work and devotion of my staff.
They teach and raise our children to become strong, loving and educated
individuals with compassion and love for the world,” she wrote on her
Facebook page.
A nurse, Rose Effiok-Okon, gave an insight into Hope’s condition and recovery.
“Hope’s condition was critical because
he was malnourished on the street for many months. He had infection like
lesions on his skin. He was admitted on January 31 and discharged after
a month at Uyo Teaching Hospital. Now all those infections have been
resolved, but he is still on drugs, and will be going on corrective
surgery on his genitals because it has an abnormal opening and affects
his urination. This could have been caused by a birth defect or what is
called a congenital abnormality. I don’t know if that was why the
parents branded him a witch.”
Effiok-Okon described Hope as “a nice and intelligent child.” SUNDAY PUNCH
noticed he was always eager to play with the other children at the
centre or watch the older ones play football, with an eagerness to join.
Everyone at the centre, both young and old, seemed to have a fondness
for the playful two-year-old.
“When he soils his clothes unexpectedly,
he calls it to one’s notice. He likes to eat neatly and does not mess
up his clothes. He was on a special diet for some time until his weight
was restored normally. With time, we believe he will get better. One
can’t say if he was well breastfed by the mother to protect the child
from major health problems,” she said.
Effiok-Okon said children like Hope, who
were labelled witches and abandoned by their parents, relatives,
communities and left dangling between the harsh conditions of life and
death, were left traumatised.
She said, “Due to the trauma from
repeated abuse on these children, some of them are aggressive and scared
when they are initially rescued and brought to the centre for the first
time. They gradually adapt because we love and accept them as our
children, give them good food and they go to school every day. We
organise holiday classes for them to keep them busy; they also have
football field for recreational therapy, and occupational therapy to
make them forget the emotional and physical abuses they had suffered.”
Way forward
Reacting to the branding of children as
witches and their attendant torture or death in the state, the Police
Public Relations Officer, Akwa Ibom, Cordelia Nwawe, said the state
police is doing a lot to stop the practice.
Nwawe said, “We warn the parents and
families; children have rights, and we follow up with the kids to ensure
they have proper education. We arrest and charge to court those who
mete out physical harm to a child. When cases get to court, it goes to
the Directorate of Public Prosecution. We take it quite seriously. We do
jingles on television and radio; we talk to the people for them to
realise we won’t condone assault on children because someone thinks they
are witches.
“Mob action is also a serious offence in
Akwa Ibom and the state police won’t let this lie. We charge to court
and look for persons who instigate the act. The Commissioner of Police
has said this is unacceptable; we have zero tolerance for violence in
any form.”
Akwa Ibom’s Commissioner of Information and Communication, Mr. Aniekan Umanah, told SUNDAY PUNCH that the practice was criminal stigmatisation of innocent and vulnerable children.
He said, “There may be isolated cases.
We have always encouraged people to report such cases to security
agencies and government, because we have a fully established welfare
department in the ministry of women affairs and social welfare saddled
with this responsibility. We need to get to the root of this. Anybody
who fails to report such is contravening the law itself and is an
accomplice. This practice is not acceptable in this state.
“Anyone who has any information on this
or any criminal activity should please draw the attention of the
security agencies, the social welfare department or better still, the
ministry of information, to it. Government will prosecute these set of
people, including the family, or anybody who brands a child a witch.”
Itauma added that witchcraft related
abuse was not restricted to Cross River or Akwa Ibom states, as it has
become a widespread phenomenon in Nigeria.
“Government needs to take a holistic
approach and launch a widespread campaign to curb this monster
otherwise; children will continue to be at the mercy of some phony
pastors who label them witches.”
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Indeed, the story of Akwa Ibom child witches is pathetic. All over
the oil-rich state, children between the ages of two and 15 are branded
witches and wizards.
They are tortured, starved and most times killed if all methods of
exorcism fails. Interestingly, it is the “Church” and various
Christian-related churches that have engaged in what many termed brutal,
barbaric and clearly outside the instructions of Jesus Christ as
recorded in the Holy Bible.
Recently, Saturday Telegraph, visited the Child’s Right and
Rehabilitation Network (CRARN), a charity organisation based in Eket,
Akwa Ibom State, where rescued children were recuperating.
Four new additions were found hiding in a bush to avoid lynching after they were labelled witches and wizards.
They did that to probably evade more tortures and humiliations by
their families. The centre takes in children banished from their family
homes by parents and relatives over the allegation of witchcraft
practice.
Many of them who came from different villages and communities
narrated their sorry ordeals and said: “We feared for our lives while on
the streets, that is why we sought refuge at CRARN.” One of them, a
13-year-old Esther Edem, from Edo, Esit-Eket, told Saturday Telegraph
that they all had similar experiences.
“I found the other girls roaming the streets and I discovered upon
inquiry that they were abandoned by their parents. Instantly we became
friends and thereafter I decided to take them to my family home and gave
them food.
“I lived with my uncle and when he came back from work, I narrated
their pathetic stories to him. I begged him to mediate by taking the
children to meet their parents if they could accept them back.
But, instead of yielding to my request, my uncle launched an attack
on me and ordered that I leave his house with the girls immediately.
My uncle even added that he had been suspecting me of being a witch
all along. “I was surprised when he pounced on me with anger.
So, I left the house and did not know where to go. While roaming the
streets in the middle of the night, and as we sat in an uncompleted
building, one of the girls, Ima, came up with an idea that we should go
to CRARN for protection. We instantly jumped at that and have been here
all this while,”
Esther said. Ima was abandoned by her grandmother who told her she
could no longer cater for a ‘witch. She lived with the woman in a rented
apartment at Ekpene Obo, Esit-Eket. Ima had earlier been accused of
witchcraft which first forced her to CRARN in 2010 at the age of five.
Though, she was reconciled back to her grandmother and they lived
happily afterwards until a prophet told the woman that Esther was still
possessed by the evil spirit and has been responsible for her
misfortunes and business downtown.
For the youngest of the three, Blessing Bassey, her ordeal started
after she attended a prayer session on a Friday night, which locals
called Tarry Night.
Two of her siblings were kidnapped by unknown gunmen which had forced
them to seek solace in the house of God. “It was there that one of the
pastors accused me of using magical powers to cause the kidnapping of my
two siblings and causing the family to go broke. It is a small church
close to the Mary Slessor Health Centre.
And things changed for the worst since that fateful day as my parents
began a string of torture on me. They do this every night until I was
forced out of the house,”Blessing narrated in tears.
Another, Daniel Aniema Ekpo, said his father lived in Upenekang, a
fishing settlement in Ibeno where the ExxonMobil is situated while he
lived with his mother in Ikot Uso Ekong, in Eket.
Daniel told this reported that it was another alleged child witch who
implicated him of being one of them after series of pressure on her to
confess and name others in the cult. “This provoked people around who
started beating me. My mother also joined them.
They once tied me to a stake and hit me many times with sticks. I was
subsequently chased out of our compound with a threat that I would be
killed if I eventually returns.” Also in this dilemma is Wisdom Emmanuel
Victory, an 11-year-old frail-looking lanky boy.
He claimed to have come from Ikono Local Government Area of Akwa Ibom
State but ran away from the church he was kept for weeks without food
because the prophet told his parents that he was not willing to denounce
witchcraft practice.
But the case of a six-year-old Emediong Ukeme Ime Cynthia seems more
frightening. Emediong, who hails from Oniok-Edo in Esit-Eket Local
Government, told Saturday Telegraph that his parents separated when he
was four, and his mother took him to live with his maternal
grandparents.
One day he decided to visit his father and stayed for about a month. “That was how my problem started.
“My stepmother returned home one day from a prayer session and told me to leave the house and never to return again.
That same night my father woke me up in the middle of the night and
asked me to confess. Such question was strange to me and I denied
knowledge of anything like that.
My response infuriated him the more and he brought out matchet and
hit me many times, threatening to kill me if I fail to confess. He then
dragged me out of the house and told me not to come to his house
anymore.”
When he left the house and roamed the streets, he met other abandoned
children in a burial ceremony. And they instantly became friends.
They were living in an uncompleted and abandoned building where some
people would come and attack them with sticks and matchets. “So, we ran
away and hid in the bush where we were finally rescued by the CRARN
rescue team.”
The story of two other eight-year-old children from Okobo Local
Government Area, who had lived on the streets for six months, after
their relatives tortured them and sent them out of their homes for
alleged witchcraft, is not different.
Mary Odiong and Ekong Asua told Saturday Telegraph that Mary was
blamed for the death of her uncle who died in Okopedi village of an
ailment many suspected was Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS).
She was accused of being behind the man’s AIDS ailment. “My family
called me out and started asking me questions concerning my involvement
in witchcraft and why I killed my uncle.
But, I told them that I did not know anything about what they were talking about.
“They beat and hit me with cutlasses and cut my buttocks with knives.
I lost consciousness when the beating became too much. Later, I woke up
to find myself in a bush. I lived on the streets for months without
food and shelter,”
she sobbed. In Ekong’s case, his parents died from what was described
as a “strange ailment,” and afterwards, his uncles accused him of being
a wizard, and blamed him for his parents’ death. “My uncles told me
that they went somewhere to find out why my parents died. They said they
were told that I killed both of them through witchcraft.
They tied my hands and started beating me up with native sugarcane and asked me to confess.
“When I insisted that I knew nothing about the death of my parents,
they took me to a bush, where I met Odiong. Both of us lived on the
streets before we were rescued and taken to African Children’s Aid
Education and Development Foundation (ACAEDF),” Ekong said.
For many decades now, children in Nigeria, particularly in Akwa Ibom, have been at the mercy of all sorts of deprivations.
They have lived and continued to grapple with misery, hunger, trafficking, and abuses of all sorts.
A report from United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), quoted a
staggering 15 million children under 14 years as being endangered across
Nigeria.
Many are said to be exposed to long hours of work in dangerous and
unhealthy environments, carrying too much responsibility for their age.
Working in such hazardous conditions with no education, little food,
pay and medical care establishes a cycle of child rights violations, the
report further said. CRARN said it had rescued hundreds of children who
were hiding in bushes to avoid lynching after they were labelled
witches and wizards, tortured, and abandoned to their fate by their
families.
Speaking to Saturday Telegraph, one the centre’s principal
coordinators, Ms Elizabeth Wilson, said she led a rescue team to where
some of the children were hiding in the bush to avoid persecution after a
hint by a volunteer before there were rescued.
“When we arrived, they wanted to run, but I told them we were coming
to help them; so they decided to follow us to our centre on our behest,”
Wilson recounted.
Many teenage children have been thrown into the streets and abandoned
while branding them as witches and wizards. An Eketbased
Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO), Stepping Stone, stated that over
1,000 children were roaming the beaches in Oron and Mbo,
while others were driven outside their parental homes in Eket and Esit-Eket as witches before they intervened.
The NGO’s effort sparked off advocacy for the child’s rights in the
country on account of persistent global struggle to ensure that the
Nigerian child enjoys full rights and privileges as a human being.
However, former governor of the state, Godswill Akpabio, signed the
bill into law, which made it a criminal offence, punishable by up to 15
years in prison to label any child a witch.
The introduced Child Rights Act 2008 was defined as a comprehensive
protection for the rights of children, especially against being labelled
as witches and wizards.
The state did not only criminalised such heinous practice on the
children but introduced free and compulsory education with all the
associated logistics and accompanying budgetary provisions, as well as
free healthcare for children.
The government did not stop there. It equally fought the war against
child labour and trafficking at all fronts and partnered with the
National Agency for Prohibition of Traffic in Persons (NAPTIP) in that
regard.
This, perhaps, may be why the then first lady of the state, Ekaette
Akpabio, established the Divine Children’s Centre in Uyo, to assist in
taking care of some of the abandoned children.
The centre, which was established in 2011, currently shelters over
200 children who were labelled witches and wizards by their parents or
guardians.
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