Policemen in Lagos brutalized a heavily pregnant married woman, stripping her naked in the process.
Chika Elekwachi
The increasing cases of police brutality in the country has officially become a worrying situation.
Three heartless police officers attached to the Satellite Police
Division in Lagos State, have reportedly brutalised an 8 month pregnant
woman, Chika Elekwachi, stripping her naked in the night of Sunday, July
19, which has led to her delivering her baby prematurely.
According the report carried in the Sun Newspaper, Elekwachi was
seriously assaulted before she was dragged to the police station.
After she passed out as a result of the ordeal, the police handed
her over to her family members who rushed her to Safe Hands Hospital,
located at Old Ojo Road, Amuwo-Odofin, where the doctors had to induce
her to put to bed.
Elekwachi who is still coming to terms with her devastating ordeal
in the hands of the officers who are meant to protect her, narrated to
reporters that at about 8pm on the day of the incident, she had left her
two kids at home and was driving to a shop in the area to buy things
for the household.
“I suddenly noticed a bus coming behind me. The bus obstructed
me and one of the occupants came out, pointed a gun at me and shouted
that I should park. He threatened to shoot if I didn’t park.
When I discovered that they were policemen, I tried to explain
to them that I wanted to park my car, so that I could enter the shop.
This incident happened at Pako Bus Stop along Ojo Road where there were
so many tankers and lorries parked indiscriminately.
I begged the one that was putting on a black T-shirt to allow
me to go, as I was pregnant. Then the next thing was, he called me a
prostitute. I was angry and reminded him that I am a married woman with
two kids.
I warned him not to call me a prostitute again. But the
policeman dragged me down from the car, even as passers-by and my friend
who was with me in my car, were begging him to let me go.
While I was screaming for help, saying, ‘I am not a thief,’
they tore my trousers. I was not putting on any underwear, so they
stripped me naked. They were dragging me, saying I must enter their
vehicle, but I refused.
They dragged me on the road, but I insisted that I would go
with them in my car. In the process, my legs and my stomach were
bruised.”
She was eventually bundled into the police vehicle and taken to the station, even in her virtually naked state.
"On getting to the police station, I pleaded with them to allow
me get a cloth from the shop. I was begging them so that I could meet
any woman nearby to give me a wrapper because I was naked.
People around were asking me what happened, and I replied that
the policemen did that to me, even though I’m not a thief. Because, with
the way I was treated, one could mistake me for a thief. I had to bite
one of the policemen on the back.
I then entered one provision store near the station where I met
a woman who gave me a gown. My phone was in my vehicle and I told the
police officers that they should allow me call my people to inform them
that I was at the station, but they refused.
They said I must be put in the cell. I was running around,
trying to get a phone, but no one would give me their phone because they
thought I was a mad woman. They were just looking at me.
I then saw a young girl, and I spoke to her in Igbo, telling
her I was not a thief. She was the one that gave me her phone and I
called my sister, because her number was the one I could easily recall.
I told her what was happening, so she came with her husband
that night and met me at the police station. They were asking me what
happened, but her husband said we had to find those who assaulted me.
So, we went into the police station and met the Divisional
Crime Officer (DCO). He told us to explain what happened, but as I was
talking, I felt dizzy and passed out.”
The state Police Police Relations Officer (PPRO), DSP Kenneth
Nwosu, confirmed the incidence, saying the officers that carried out the
assault have been nabbed and are in detention and would be prosecuted
according to the law guiding the force.