Dr. Akin Baruwa |
Eighteen-year-old Shola is one of the
numerous hopeful candidates, wishing to secure admission into the
University of Lagos. But her score of 211 in the Unified Tertiary
Matriculation Examination fell short of the requirement for Mass
Communication, which was her choice.
Her father, who resided in.......
Abesan Estate
in Ipaja area of Lagos, had done all he could to ensure that her
daughter would become a university student this year but all his efforts
seemed to be futile.
“Someone told me to send her UTME
registration number. He checked on the university website and said she
was not eligible. Not convinced, I went to the school myself to check
and it was the same problem.
“I had to start making calls to other
universities where she could secure admission and someone told me she
they could be helped to gain admission into the Olabisi Onabanjo
University with that score.
“As soon as the UTME result was released
around May, I informed a friend of mine who lives within the estate, who
is a lecturer at UNILAG. I took my daughter to him and he promised that
when it was time for the post-UTME examination, he would help her out
with the process.”
The friend Shola’s father mentioned is
Dr. Akin Baruwa, a lecturer in the Department of Accounting, UNILAG, who
is also a chairman of one of the community development committees of
Abesan Estate.
Shola’s father explained that when she
realised that her result was not being accepted as eligible for Mass
Communication, he went back to Baruwa on July 22, 2015 and the lecturer
told him to bring his daughter the following morning so he could take
her to campus and see how he could help.
“He said they had to take off very early
the following morning. I did not suspect anything unusual about that
timing because I trusted him. By 4am, I roused my daughter. We prepared
and I took her to Baruwa’s house. I did not opt to follow them because I
trusted him. I did not imagine that anything untoward could happen,” he
said.
Baruwa and Shola took off from Abesan
about 5am. She would later return home by 11am. His daughter was
noticeably moody as she came home. Two hours earlier, Baruwa had called
the father and told him that he had done all he could but that it did
not seem her admission would be possible.
“When he told me that, I believed he had done all he could and told my daughter to come back home,” he said.
But it was not the same Shola that home
that came back. She was moody and noticeably quiet. She went straight to
her room and locked the door.
In company with child rights activist,
Mrs. Esther Ogwu, whom the case was reported to by the family, our
correspondent spoke with Shola in private to give details of what
actually happened in Baruwa’s office that day.
It was obvious the girl was trying hard
to stay composed. While she spoke, her right hand would go to her lower
abdomen occasionally. When asked about it, she explained that she was
still feeling some pain, which had reduced a lot since she got
treatment.
Shola said on Thursday, July 23, 2015, as
her father handed her over to the lecturer, she still did not suspect
anything until they got to around Maryland.
“While I was inside the car, he started
to touch my hair and rub my head. I was very surprised and I brushed off
his hand. He never tried it again till we got to UNILAG,” Shola
alleged.
According to her, while they were on the
way, Baruwa was showing her different parts of town, telling her about
places she did not know.
She alleged, “While we were on the way,
he asked if I go out at all and I told him I don’t usually go out. And
he would show me a place and say ‘This is Maryland o. You may not know
since you don’t go out.’ Then he took me to the Yaba College of
Technology. He drove inside and showed me the place. We later proceeded
to UNILAG.
“When we got to his office, it was about
6.30am. The offices in the building were deserted. He said he liked to
be early to avoid traffic. He told me to sit on the couch in his office.
“I noticed he was restless. He would
stand and go outside sometimes. He asked if I wanted anything, I told
him I was fine. He put on the television; I told him I was okay. He put
on the air conditioner and I told him I did not want that.
“He had already heated water and made
Coffee, which he offered to me. I told him I was okay and really did not
need that. He then put the hot Coffee on the table. Later, out of
respect, I took the cup and sipped a little. I started to feel drowsy
not long after that. I did not know why.”
According to Shola’s narration, Baruwa
later took her to see a female official in another building who examined
her documents and explained further that there was little that could be
done on her admission.
Baruwa reportedly said she might have to opt for diploma.
Shola claimed that when they went back to his office, the lecturer kept her document on his table.
She said, “He kept standing and moving
around the office. Later, he went outside and when he came back inside,
he locked the door and kept the key on his table. I did not know what
was happening.
“A moment later, he told me to pick up a
paper for him beside the couch. As I bent down to pick up the paper, he
pushed me into a corner of the couch and held me down as he forcibly
removed my trousers and underwear.”
Our correspondent asked at this point if Shola made any attempt to shout to alert anybody nearby.
She claimed that she actually screamed
but that the way he held her down did not allow her voice to be as
audible as she had wanted it to be.
Shola claimed, “If people were around the
office, they would have heard me shout. He held me down, and pulled
down my trousers and underwear. I screamed and begged him to leave me
alone but he did not.
“After he had his way, he released me. As
soon as I pulled up my trousers, I grabbed the keys to the door and
rushed out while he was dressing up. He was walking behind me as I
walked downstairs from his office. He said nothing as I walked away
crying. He later went back.”
Shola’s father told our correspondent
that he had been able to secure a place for her to write her post-UTME
examination for an admission into OOU but the young girl has refused to
go.
When our correspondent asked Shola why
she refused to go, she said “How can I be sure that this same thing
would not happen there? I don’t know anybody there. If it happens again,
where would I run to?”
Our correspondent tracked down Dr. Baruwa a day after speaking with Shola and he gave his version of the encounter.
According to him, he indeed had a sexual encounter with Shola but it was “consensual.”
The lecturer, who seemed to be in his
early 40s, told our correspondent that he made the mistake of not doing
enough to resist the temptation of ‘sleeping’ with Shola.
Speaking with our correspondent in the
front of his house out of earshot of his wife and two children, Dr.
Baruwa said, “I swear to God that the girl agreed to everything that
happened. She was a chatty girl, who did not show any shyness.
“It is true that I took her to YABATECH
and showed her places. What is not true is that I deliberately took off
from home because of any plan to do anything bad to her. I took off from
home that early to avoid traffic.
“When she was in my office, she was the
one telling me to be free with her. I realised that I needed to lie down
a little and did not want my shirt to be rumpled. When I pulled it off,
she even told me not to mind her presence that since it was my office, I
could do whatever I wanted.
“When we first got to the office, she lay
on my chest and was even playing with my manhood. That was why I could
not resist it. After we came back from seeing the woman who was supposed
to help with her admission, she was about to go when I told her to give
me a hug. It was that which now led to the actual sexual encounter.
“When I realised that I could not resist
her, I had to tell her to let me put on a condom. The truth is that,
while I was putting on a condom, she stood by and waited. I did not
actually penetrate. When she was saying ‘it’s enough, it’s enough’ and
complaining that her tummy had started hurting her, I stopped.”
Baruwa explained that Shola’s father had
sent a cryptic text message to him (days later when he learnt of what
happened to his daughter), saying that he had learnt of what he did to
his daughter.
“I know I betrayed his trust but nobody
would understand it was consensual. I would have reached out to him to
beg him if I think it would solve the problem,” he said.
When told that Shola went through more
than a week of excruciating abdominal pain, Baruwa explained that if
Shola left him the day of the encounter with any sign of hurt, he would
have reached out to her to find out how she was doing.
Two days after our correspondent spoke
with Baruwa, he was arrested by the police and the case is being
investigated at the Isokoko Police Division, Agege, Lagos.
The case has also been reported at the
Office of the Public Defender under the Lagos State Ministry of Justice.
The Director of the OPD, Mrs. Omotola Rotimi, said the case would be
followed to its logical conclusion.
Director of the Esther Child Rights
Foundation, Esther Ogwu, a social worker handling the case, said when
the case was first reported to her, the health of the girl was her
immediate concern.
She said, “I had to refer them to the
Mirabel Sexual Assault Referral Centre in Lagos so that she could get
comprehensive treatment. This case is just another reason for girls and
young women to be cautious of the issue of sexual assault.
“I believe this lecturer had been doing
this in the past. It is necessary for girls to be aware and know what to
do when in a potentially dangerous situation where they may be
assaulted.
“I don’t expect him (the lecturer) to
admit that he raped her. I knew he would say it was consensual, but I
suspect that this is not the first time he would do such thing. Let the
law take its course because we don’t know how many other girls are being
saved because this case is coming out to the public.”
Baruwa was arraigned before an Ikeja Magistrate’s Court, Lagos on Thursday. He has been remanded at the Kirikiri Prison.
Share your thoughts....thanks!
this man deserve to be stoned to death, but sha konji things na wahala o
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