The incident happened yesterday in Ikot Ekang Itam, Uruan Local Government Area of Akwa Ibom State. Read report by an NGO, Child's Right and Rehabilitation Network (CRARN).
A 10-year-old girl, Udeme Usen Etukudoh, may have
been scarred for life after her mother burnt her face with electric iron for
allegedly stealing N200.
Early Thursday, I met ten-year-old Udeme
Usen Etukudoh, an indigene of Ikot Ekang Itam, being treated for burns and a
deep cut on her face at a small pharmacy along Calabar/Itu Road. Upon inquiry,
I learned that Udeme was severely abused by her own mother for "stealing
N200", the sum which is less than a dollar.
Udeme, a Primary 5 pupil of RCM School, near Itam
Police Divisional Headquarters, said her mother, because of the missing N200,
pushed the plug of an electric iron into an electrical socket and further
applied the extremely hot device on parts of her body. The burnings later
disfigured her face. Not satisfied with the burns, the girl said her mother
used a short wood to hit and tear open her right chin just by her eye. Her
mother, Aniedi Etim Akpan (according to the little girl), had gone out for
petty trading at the popular Itam market as of the time I visited their house
to make findings. Udeme's stepfather, whose name could not be ascertained at
the time of checks, and a woman who said she was the little girl's elder
sister, said that the missing money was stolen by Udeme, and that she deserved
the burns dealt on her as "punishment". But the little girl, who
lives with her mother and stepfather, denied stealing the money. She said
anytime money gets missing from her step father's pocket or house, the theft
would be attributed to her. She said she was innocent of the accusation. Upon
further inquiry, Udeme led me to her biological father, Usen Okon Etukudoh, a
bricklayer who lives just close to where his daughter lives with her mother.
Usen said Udeme had opted to stay with her mother, Aniedi, after their
separation some years back, but that he would stab his former wife with a
broken bottle if anything happens to his daughter.
As at 11.30 am, Udeme, dressed in her school
uniform, had not taken breakfast when I met her at the pharmacy. To show the
extent of trauma the little girl went through, the step-father who took her to
the pharmacy shop rejected the bill of N4,000 he was asked to pay for the
child's emergency treatment. He wanted to pay N2,000 instead. I had to buy a
loaf of bread and Coca-Cola so that she could eat something before being
administered with what the pharmacy attendant called "inflammatory injection"
to stop the pain. Two things are likely to happen to the child if her father
decides to let her stay continuously with her mother (as I later told him): it
is either that she leaves the house (to God knows where) in order to be free
from torture or she gets killed secretly by her mother and stepfather. God help
the hapless child!
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thank you all for taking your time to read!!!