A middle aged woman,
Ene Edem Okon, has been arrested by the police for allegedly inflicting
bodily harm and tying her 11-year-old daughter, Queeneth Ene Edem, hands
and legs for being wayward. She was arrested when Queeneth appeared in
her school, Government Primary School, Akim, with multiple wounds on her
chest, stomach and buttocks prompting the school authorities to report
the matter to the police at the Akim Police Station.
The girl
narrated to Sunday Vanguard that, on February 17, she left home at Eneyo
village in Akpabuyo Local Government Area for the Maternity Junction
Settlement, some four kilometers away from home, to meet her cousin, one
Blessing, but did not return home. “We were waiting for Blessing’s
friend from whom she wanted to collect something but she delayed in
coming and we waited till night and, because we were afraid of going
back home, we slept in an uncompleted building at the Maternity
Junction”, she said.
The 11-year-old said the next day, one of her
friends saw her at the Maternity Junction and told her that her mother
was looking for her with a machete after which she became afraid to go
back home. “We stayed on the road near our house and were breaking
kernel to eat when my mother sent somebody to come and catch us. That
person came pretending to play with us but suddenly grabbed me and
dragged me to my mother”.
The mother, angry, allegedly got hold of
her and used a rod to hit her all over her body, thus leaving her with
severe wounds. “She also put the kitchen knife in the fire she was
cooking and when it was hot, she placed it on my buttocks”, the girl
stated.
When Sunday Vanguard met Mrs Ene Okon at the Akim Police
Station, she appeared remorseful, stating that she was driven by anger
because Queeneth was stubborn and had formed the habit of spending the
night outside at such a tender age. “I sent her to school in far away
Calabar because I don’t trust the school here in Akpabuyo but she is
just too stubborn, so I had to teach her a lesson.”
Mr Hogan Bassey,
the police spokesman for Cross River Police Command, said the woman
would appear in court after investigations are concluded.
Mr Bassey
Ibor, a child rights activist, said children’s courts in the state are
not functioning and called on the state government to fund the courts.
“The cases we have taken to the children’s courts have suffered long
adjournments because the judges are not sitting. Government should, as a
matter of urgency, ensure that the courts are funded so that these
children would not continue to be denied of justice.”
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