Read the pathetic story of teenagers being used as baby-making machines in Imo State culled from The Nation;
Nine girls, forced into pregnancy at a
‘baby factory’ in Imo State ,yesterday spoke of how they became victims. The
nine were arrested by the police yesterday after initially escaping during a
raid of the ‘baby factory’.Their arrest brings to 26 the number of
victims rescued from Ahamefula Motherless Babies Home, Umuaka in Njaba Ciouncil
Area of the state. They are aged between 14 and 25.
The visibly exhausted girls said
that they were held against their wish by the proprietor of the so-called
motherless babies home simply known as Madam One Thousand. The victims are all
from Imo. They said their parents were unaware of their whereabouts.
According to them, they were
taken to the ‘baby factory’ by scouts engaged by Madam One Thousand.
The scouts include women who go
about seeking vulnerable girls. 17-year old Adaobi Akubueze ,until her
abduction a student in Lagos, said she referred to the centre by a medical
doctor who conducted a pregnancy test on her.
She said: “The result of the test
was positive and the doctor said I should not abort the pregnancy. He said he
knew where I could go and have the child with adequate maternal care and where
the baby would be taken care of until I would be ready to take charge.
“So I ran away from home without
informing my parents. But on getting to the centre in Imo State, I was asked to
produce my letter of introduction. After that, my phone was taken away from me
and that was how I stayed there till the Police came and arrested us.”
She said of conditions in the
centre: “We were kept in a crowded room with little ventilation and a doctor
came once in a while to check us. Nobody was allowed to go beyond the first
gate also known as the Green Gate. And one boy who we referred to as oga came
around to sleep with the girls, especially those that were not yet pregnant.
“The compound was built in such a
way that made escape impossible. It is fenced with high walls and no visitor
was allowed to come into the area where the girls were kept, except Madam,
Oyibo and the doctor.
“After nine months, those who
were due to be delivered were taken to another location and Madam would only
bring back news to us that our friend had given birth. But they never came back
”.
Another victim, Chinyere
Onwuegbu, also 17, said she was living with her mother, a widow, until she ran
away with one of her friends who convinced her that she could make a huge
amount of money if she could be pregnant and sell the child after delivery.
Her words: “My friend brought me
here and she told me to stay and get pregnant. Madam promised to take good care
of me and that she would give me N60,000 if I had a baby boy and N30,000 if it
was a girl.
“ But after I was impregnated,
Madam began to force me to work hard despite my condition. I cried everyday but
no way to escape”. From outside, the ‘baby factory’ looks very much like a pure
water production facility. It sits on an expansive land and is walled round.
The main building has several rooms secured with iron doors. A neighbour, who
volunteered information on condition of anonymity, said: “All we saw were
people coming to buy water but we began to express worry when we noticed flashy
cars coming to the place at nights.”
Investigation also revealed that
the owner of the ‘baby factory’ also runs a maternity home where the victims
are taken to be delivered of their babies. Oyibo, who was identified by the
girls as the one who impregnated most of them, denied that he was paid to
impregnate them.
He said: “I was employed to work
in the pure water company, but I have slept with most of the girls but not to
impregnate them as reported.”
Who is Madam One Thousand?
It was gathered that Madam One
Thousand is no stranger to the police having been arrested by them at least
twice before for a similar offence. A source, who asked not to be named, said:
“If the police are serious, they can arrest her; they know her identity. She
has been in this trade for a long time. She even has medical doctors who work
for her.
“Apart from that, since she also
runs a registered maternity home, why can’t the police look in that direction
and get her identity from the Ministry of Health that registered her clinic?”
Sources said she is at the head
of a syndicate that also includes doctors. The doctors refer victims to her and
get paid accordingly. Efforts to get the Commissioner of Police, Mohammed
Katsina, and the Police Public Relations Officer, Joy Elemoko, to comment on
what becomes of the girls were unsuccessful as they did not pick calls to their
handsets. However, a reliable police source said the girls would be handed over
to the Ministry of Women Affairs after proper documentation for adequate
medical attention as some of them are ill.
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