Photo: Onyeka Onwenu/Mrs. Olajoke Adesipe |
A business woman, Mrs. Olajoke Adesipe, has accused popular musician, Onyeka Onwenu, of assault.
Adesipe, who had petitioned the National
Human Rights Commission, also said she was...
forcefully evicted from her
shop at the National Centre for Women Development, Abuja on the order of
Onyeka, who is the Director-General of the centre.
Adesipe, in the letter dated March 3,
2014, claimed that Onwenu directed security officers to throw her wares
out of her shop, adding that she was assaulted when she took the
pictures of the incident, on the instruction of the DG.
The business woman, who sells textiles,
said she was a yearly tenant, adding that her current tenancy would not
end until December, 2014.
The petition reads in part, “On January 21, 2014, I heard that the DG might likely eject me even when my rent is still valid.”
Adesipe said she got a letter to vacate
the premises within three days on January 28,2014, adding that another
letter was served on her on February 4, in which the centre threatened
to go to court.
She explained that she wrote a letter to
Onwenu on February 6, and sent her a text message three days later
seeking an audience. She said the DG gave her an appointment for the
following day.
Adesipe said she met other members of the management team at Onwenu’s office and she narrated her story.
She said the musician apologised and said that a formal apology letter would be written by the centre to her.
She added that Onwenu said she should
vacate the shop and promised that she would be relocated to the shopping
complex within the premises.
Adesipe said she insisted that she would vacate the shop on the condition that she would be given an allocation letter.
“On February 13, I got a call from
Onwenu asking why I had not moved out of the shop and I told her that
nobody had given me an allocation letter for the new shop as she
promised.
“She said if I failed to move out by February 14, she would send for the State Security Service to chase me out.
“On February 14, I was at the centre
early. I heard that Onwenu, in company with her security personnel, had
forced my shop open. I ran there and saw her supervising the forceful
ejection without any prior court or police order,” Adesipe stated in the
petition.
She explained that she took pictures of
the scene with her phone and Onwenu directed that her phone be
confiscated. She said in the struggle for the phone, she was beaten and
dragged on the ground, while her cloth and bags were torn.
Culled - Punch
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