A forty-year-old man, John Friday Akpan, from Akwa Ibom State but
resident in Calabar, the Cross River State capital, is now explaining to
the police how he allegedly heeded the advice of a herbalist, one Dr
Okokon, and tagged his two children, Elisha Udobong and Esther, as
witches.
Akpan, who allegedly subjected the two children, aged 12 and 6
respectively, to harrowing treatment by nailing them to a plank and
locking them up without food for days, was said to have told the
police the children took his money to their “master in the witchcraft
world and therefore deserved no mercy”.
The children, whose emaciated and dirty appearance replicated the
images of starving children in famine ravaged Somalia and war torn Sudan
following weeks of starvation, said they survived on water supplied
by one of the man’s kids by another woman. “Our sister, Peace, usually
brought us water inside the hut when our father and our mother had gone
out”, Esther said.
The father, the kids said, used to reside in Akpabuyo with the family
where he sent them to a private school,
Regent Nursery and Primary
School, Ikot Nkanda, but when their mother died and the man took another
wife, Iquo, the story changed. Elisha, in JSS1, said: “My mother
(stepmother ) said the woman who used to live near our house in
Akpabuyo gave us food and she put something in the food and when we ate
it we changed to birds at night and took out father’s money to our
master in the witchcraft world”.
According to the boy, he was alleged to have taken 4 000 naira while
Esther took 2000 and that angered their father and step mother who
started beating them and denying them food “because they said we took
the money to our master”. The maltreatment became worse when they
relocated to Calabar and took up residence at 23 Akpandem Street, off
Edim Otop Street at the municipality. “He (father) nailed us to one big
plank and beat us that we should bring back the money but we had no
money to give to him”, Esther said.
Unable to get back his money from the children, Akpan allegedly went
for the final onslaught against the kids by locking them up in an
abandoned hut where he lived so that they could die. “When the situation
became too bad, neighbours, worried that the children may die and the
police descend on them, raised the alarm and reported to the police at
the Airport Division who swooped on the parents and got them arrested”,
Mr James Ibor, a child rights activist, told Sunday Vanguard.
He said the DPO of the Airport Division called him “at about 11 am on
Friday, March 8 that there was another case of children stigmatisation
as witches and I went to the station and behold, what I saw made me
weep”.
Ibori said the children were so hungry and weak that it was apparent
that they would have died if they had not, been rescued. “They were so
weak that we had to give them water first, then some fruits; even at
that the system of the girl could not accommodate the fruits and she had
to visit the toilet a few minute after she ate the banana I gave to
them”.
DSP John Umoh, the spokesman of the Cross River State Police Command,
said efforts were on to arrest Okokon the herbalist so that “he and
the parents can appear in court to answer charges on felony”.
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