Nigeria’s savaged children
By okey ndibe
(E-mail: okeyndibe@gmail.com)
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
I had not planned to write today about Nigeria’s savaged children. The
subject thrust itself on me. A lot of other topics and issues had jostled for
my attention. I had wanted to devote today’s column to a celebration of
Adam Oshiomhole’s legal triumph. After spending a year and a half in the
courts to claim his governorship mandate from the usurper called Oserhiemen
Osunbor, the former labor leader got his prize restored two weeks ago.
The victory, which came after many shameful verdicts by the Court of Appeal,
called for measured celebration. Even so, I was going to pause at some point
to insert a note of disappointment about Mr. Oshiomhole’s early and bizarre
misstep – his hurried trip to Abuja to pledge loyalty to Mr. Umaru Yar’Adua.
Surely, a man of Oshiomhole’s mettle ought to know that the people of
Edo State, not the occupant of Aso Rock, are his true employers. His loyalty
is, or should be, to them.
I had thought to revisit Maurice Iwu, the embodiment of rigging, a man whose
every speech appears calculated to traumatize Nigerians. Iwu has lately rigged
a so-called “Man of the Year” award from a rogue faction of the
National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS).
I contemplated beaming a searchlight on Speaker Dimeji Bankole and his cast
of gluttons pretending to be lawmakers.
Mr. Bankole’s decision to sink N2.3 billion to buy more than three hundred
Peugeot 407 cars for himself and many other members of the House of Representatives
is another testimony to careless greed. This is a legislative body that stood
unconcerned as Nigerian children lost five weeks of classes because their teachers
went on strike to demand better pay.
And what were the teachers asking for? A guaranteed minimum of N20,000 per month,
the kind of sum these legislators spend on one meal in Abuja. By any measure
– but especially considering the cost of living in many parts of Nigeria
– N20,000 is a mere pittance. Yet, Bankole, who takes home millions of
naira each month for little or no work done, gallivants around the globe at
the Nigerian taxpayer’s expense, and is spending N5.2 million to outfit
himself with a new bullet-proof car, did not appear to lose sleep over the teachers’
strike much less their pupils’ plight.
It was tempting to beam my searchlight on the PDP and its recent obscene fundraising
extravaganza. Again, the “thieftains” and sponsors of that gathering
of usurpers proved to the world that their primary ambition is to serve themselves
while ruining a nation. If ever a political party specialized in wrecking a
country, the PDP is it.
Another potential subject was the latest chilling act by some ratings of the
Nigerian Navy. Last week, according to newspaper reports, they set upon a policeman
in Abeokuta, Ogun State, and killed him. This tragic outing came less than two
weeks after six ratings pummeled the daylight out of a young, wiry woman named
Uzoma Okere. After reading accounts of the hapless police officer’s gruesome
death, I imagined Ms. Okere in the quietude of her room thanking God that she
made it out alive. Since it’s been more than a week since several ‘authorities,”
including Yar’Adua “ordered” full investigations, I was going
to ask if the investigators had flown to China, Dubai and London to hunt down
the “facts of the matter.”
There was the other subject, reported in the Punch, to the effect that Enugu
State was wasting N200 million to send its entire legislative team to a two-week
jamboree in London -- allegedly to learn about parliamentary procedures! Yet,
there are hundreds of Nigerian political scientists who understand the subject,
and would have trained the Enugu team for next to nothing. Why, I wondered,
doesn’t the state send all its doctors to the U.S. to learn the latest
surgical and therapeutic procedures; all its teachers to Japan, to master the
secrets of turning students into math geniuses; all its journalists to Fleet
Street, England; all its civil servants to Sweden; all its small-time thieves
to Italy to learn how to become big-time mafia gangsters. Why not, since the
state apparently has more money than its officials know what to do with?
In the midst of weighing all these subjects, I decided to take a peep at a popular
website tagged www.nigeriavillagesquare.com. It was there I saw a report titled
“Horror in Akwa Ibom.” Curious, I clicked on an accompanying video
link. In a fraction of a second, I was transported to one of the most gruesome,
barbaric and dehumanizing documentaries I’ve ever watched. The reel revealed
a documentary run on Britain’s Channel 4 TV channel and captioned “Saving
Africa’s Witch Children.” In an instant, I was placed in front of
a wrenching gallery of savagery, horror and cruelty perpetrated at children.
Innocent, helpless children!
For some minutes, I gazed in absolute shock. I shook with shame, revulsion and
rage at these graphic images of children killed, mutilated, burned, starved
and abandoned, all on the grounds that they are “witches and wizards.”
A shirtless man in a village looks straight at the camera and states with deadpan
ease, “I want to kill that small girl.” Another woman, apparently
a mother, pointed to two or three of her children and said they had confessed
to killing their grandmother – with witchcraft! The camera pans to a young,
big-eyed girl, her expression one of shy befuddlement. Then the narrator explains:
“This is the story of Africa’s child witches, like five-year old
Mary denounced as Satan made flesh.”
One girl tells how her “senior” brother poured boiling water on
her, scalding her skin. Another girl’s torso shows the hideous injury
inflicted when her father made her sit on a fire.
There’s the story of a thirteen-year old girl, stooped on the ground,
her skull still showing the scar of a nail driven into it!
Then there’s a man named “Bishop” Sunday Ulup-Aya, a self-styled
“poison destroyer,” the poison he destroys being witchcraft, and
the bearers of that poison being innocent children. Some of the accused witches
and wizards are still toddlers. Before they have learned to walk, they have
been diagnosed as blood-sucking witches or wizards by “Bishop” Madman
and his fellow traders in superstition posing as followers of Christ.
White-gowned with a huge red ribbon around his waist, a red wool cap on his
head, the “bishop” is a portrait of a madman as a healer. Watching
the videotape of his rituals of deliverance, I recognize him as a charlatan,
fraud artist and salesman of deception who has started his own tragic cottage
industry.
I n one of the segments I found out that one Pastor Helen Akpabio has done more
than any person to create hell on earth for these innocent children. Ms. Akpabio,
who parades as a pastor, specializes in “witchcraft” preaching.
She’s fast-talking, but her statements don’t stand up to reason.
She struck me as a pretender to divine inspiration.
This woman has produced home movies in which children are shown to feast on
human flesh. Akpabio’s fertile fantasies have fed the fears of many parents.
They have also fueled an all-out merciless assault on children whose only “crime”
is that they are too little to stand up for themselves. These hapless kids are
tortured to confess to insane charges of witchcraft, and then those “confessions”
are used to justify the meting out of horror on God’s children! It’s
a crime that begs for immediate, drastic redress. Ms. Akpabio ought to be arrested
and made to pay for the horrors she has encouraged against children. She should
be compelled to produce proof that any child has “eaten” a corpse.
If she cannot, then she deserves to be permanently prohibited from continuing
her sadistic and mindless campaign of deception.
Channel 4’s documentary estimates that as many as 15,000 children in Akwa
Ibom have been branded as witches. They must have grossly underestimated. “Bishop,”
who charges as much as N400,000 naira to “destroy” each case of
witchcraft, states that Akwa Ibom harbors 2.3 million witches and wizards. The
man is shown in the report as he hands a dazed child “wizard” a
potion to drink. The concoction, according to the report, contains “pure
alcohol, a substance called African mercury, and the ‘bishop’s’
own blood.” The bishop, who speaks in halting, ungrammatical English,
boasts: “I killed up to 110 people who was identified to be a winch.”
To watch the documentary is to be confronted by fresh stark evidence of the
broad devaluation of life in the space called Nigeria. What factors produced
a depth of ignorance and superstition so powerful that parents would brutally
maim their own children in the name of fighting witchcraft? Where were the police
and other investigative apparatuses of state power as hundreds, perhaps thousands,
of children were being tortured and killed, stigmatized as demonic forces? Why
had the police not arrested “Bishop” Ulup-Aya, a confessed serial
murderer who feeds hapless children his own blood to drink? Why did it take
a lone, horrified Britisher to unearth this scandal, this twenty-first holocaust
happening right in the glare of sunlight?
Nigeria has notoriety as a place where nobody is ever held responsible for anything.
Yet, on this one, both the commissioner of police as well as the state director
of the State Security Services should explain why they didn’t detect,
or stop, this horror. They deserve to be fired for slumbering while bestial
parents as well as madmen and women posing as the anointed of God made innocent
children to go through living hell.
This whole tragedy exposes the grave dangers of leaving unchecked the emergence
of fraudsters who style themselves men or women of God. As Nigeria’s misery
index has risen, many citizens – unable to put food on the table, or to
gain access to healthcare, or to generally live with the dignity of human beings
– have taken to superstition, make-belief and magic. Instead of recognizing
the objective factors and forces that devalue their lives, they accept some
pastor or imam’s lie that they are victims of “spiritual attack”
by diabolical neighbors or even sinister relatives.
The horror of Akwa Ibom is a wake-up call. A society that would cast children
in the role of these “spiritual” enemies and tormentors is an abomination.