Gunmen invaded the labour room of a maternity home
in Nkwoegwu, Ohuhu, in Umuahia North LGA of Abia State and took away a new born
baby while nurses were battling to save the mother from bleeding to death.
The baby, a boy, was still dripping with blood when
the evil men seized and folded him with the bed sheet in which he was lying.
The mother, Mrs. Eberechi Ihezukwu, says she still
thinks that she is in one deep dream, which she will wake up from. “I only
heard the cry of my baby and I asked the nurse its sex and she told me that it
was a baby boy. I have had three girls for my husband and this is the first
male child. My heart was joyful as I felt that I have got an identity in my
husband’s house.
With the joy, I was happy that if the nurses stopped
the bleeding, its arrival would be a consolation for my travails. “Now see what
they have done to me. My breasts are heavy with milk; it is a burden I have
refused to bear. They should please bring back my baby to suck my breasts. I
refuse to believe that my baby has gone; the God who put it in my womb for nine
months before its delivery will fish out the perpetrators and my baby will be
brought back to me. Continue after the cut:
Peace will continue to elude those who have taken it
until they bring it back to me,” Mrs. Ihezukwu prayed. Her husband, Clifford
Ihezukwu, a radio/television repairer, said what was too much for him to
understand was how the police, who he reported the incident to turned him into
a suspect and locked him up in a cell for two days (Tuesday to Thursday) until
he allegedly bailed himself with N15, 000.
“On Tuesday, November 13, 2012, at about 2pm, my
wife who was already heavy with a baby told me she was going to hospital (Our
Lady of Apostles, Nkwoegwu, Ohuhu, Umuahia North LGA of Abia State) where she
normally puts to bed. Later, she phoned me, seeking for my consent as the
nurses wanted to give her hot drip to help her deliver of the baby since during
her three previous pregnancies, there was no time she was given such hot drip
before she put to bed. Instantly, I gave my consent if that would be the
solution to the problem.
I learnt that the drip was at about 6pm. By 7pm, I
went there to see her since it is within a short distance from my home. When I
got to the maternity, I saw my wife’s sister rejoicing; she told me that my
wife had just put to bed. I thanked God and told her to take charge while I
went back to check what I was cooking. I was there when she rushed back to the
house and was shouting: “My stomach! My stomach!” I asked her what was amiss and
she told me that gunmen invaded the maternity, kicked her in the stomach after
overpowering the security man and collected everybody’s cell phones, including
that of my wife who was still inside the labour room where the nurses were
battling to stop the bleeding after the delivery.
They dashed into the labour room, grabbed the baby
who was still dripping with blood and dashed off. My wife was not yet conscious
of what was going on as she battled for survival after the nurses had
administered her with some injection to stop the bleeding. So, I rushed to the
maternity. When I got there, the whole place was locked; I went round knocking
at the windows until someone opened. When they narrated how gunmen carried out
their operation and took my baby away, I took my wife and went straight home.
"When I later came back to the maternity,
soldiers had besieged the arena. After asking questions, the soldiers picked
the five nurses and I told them that my wife was still bleeding and appealed to
them to allow one nurse to attend to her and they obliged me. After some time,
policemen came and asked us what happened and I told them what transpired.
Then, they asked me to come to the station in the morning and report the matter
officially.
They asked me and I directed them to the home of the
owner of the maternity and they left. In the morning, I was attending to my
wife and children when they came and asked me why I had not come to the station
as they directed me. Then, I told them that I was still attending to my wife and
children and would soon be with them. Shortly after, I went to Afugiri Police
Station to make an entry. On getting there, the policemen who came to my house
earlier were not present so I waited for about four hours before they came back
as I was told that they went to Umuosu, the home of the owner of the maternity.
I told the Divisional Police Officer (DPO) what I
knew about the matter. When he asked why I left the maternity I told him that I
went to feed my children and look after my wife who was still down. After
another two hours, I told them that I was going to eat and see how my wife and
children were doing. As I was speaking with him, he ordered that I should be
kept behind the counter. My brother who came with me had to go and buy malt and
snacks for me to eat because I was already famished. “Then the owner of the
maternity, Mrs. Dan Mbakwe and her husband came with my Sister- in-Law. About
4pm, I asked them what my offence was and why I should not be allowed to go
home and see my family, but the policemen kept mute. After some time, they
started intimidating and telling me that I was the number one suspect in the
case and that I would soon be taken to see the Commissioner of Police and I
said ok.
“At about 5 pm, they brought out a Hilux van, put me, my sister
in-law, Mrs. Mbakwe and her husband and the securityman at the hospital in it
and took us to the State CID headquarters. At the State CID, I told them my
story and they told me that it was late for me to be released and that I would
be locked up till the next day.
They asked me to pull off my dress and then hauled
my sister and me in-law into cell. But they kept Mrs. Mbakwe, her husband and
the securityman at the counter. Then they all left and handed over to another
set of policemen on duty. “In the morning, just before people started coming to
work, they put us (the trio) into cell for about an hour to look as if all of
us had been inside the cell all night. I then asked the Investigating Police
Officer (IPO) what my offence was and he told me that no one had come for me.
He said that he had asked them to bring N20, 000 for my bail. ‘Are you asking
that amount of money from some one who had been passing through such a trauma?’
I asked the man who came for me later – Chief Ukaobasi.
I told him to look into my trouser pocket at the
counter, maintaining that I had N8, 000 inside it. He found the money intact,
added N2, 000 to it and paid the police with a promise to bring a balance of
N5, 000 if they released me. On Thursday, they released me to go home. I then
borrowed N5, 000 from a neigbour and sent to them to bring the total sum to
N15, 000. But by I pm on that Thursday, the owner of the hospital and the
security man were released. That is what I’m passing through. “I wonder why I
should be made to go through this after my baby had been kidnapped and my wife
left at a point of death.
“The name of the lady who signed my bail bond is
Chioma. I ran to the police to help me because I had nobody and the police
threw me into cell and turned me into a suspect instead of helping me to look
for my stolen child. I am calling on the relevant authorities to come to my
rescue. I have no one to fight for me,” he lamented. When contacted on phone,
the State Commissioner of Police, Mr. Ambrose Aisabor, who was shocked said he
was not aware of the matter.
“Where did this happen; I’m not aware of this
incident; I have to find out,” the CP replied. When Daily Sun visited the
maternity along Nkwoegwu road in Ohuhu. It was under lock and key. Daily Sun
also visited the home of the Mbakwes, owners of the maternity at Umuosu, Okauga
and did not find any body at home for comments.
Culled from Sunnewsonline
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