22-year-old student of Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife,
Osun state who was rumoured to flush her baby inside one of
the toilets in her hostel after giving birth narrates what actually went down.
When the news first broke, a lot of people vilified
her. It was reported that she wanted to get rid of what many would describe as
a bundle of joy.
People thus wondered why a
22-year-old undergraduate would try to flush away her baby in one of the
toilets in Moremi Hall, her hall of residence at the Obafemi Awolowo
University, Ile-Ife, Osun State.
Without
clarifying the circumstances that led to the delivery in the toilet, they went
on to social media networks, putting on trial Miss Oyinlola Rotimi, the
400-Level student of Agricultural Extension and Rural Sociology at OAU, who delivered a baby boy on Wednesday.
While
the news went round the campus, the traumatised young mother was
hurriedly taken to the institution’s Health Centre by two cleaners, Mrs.
Shipebi Grace and Mrs. Cecilia Ologbenla. The social media was further flooded
with stories that Oyinlola wanted to kill her baby. The OAU management
investigated the matter and found out it was not true. Rotimi, who was
discharged from thehospital on
Friday, has also narrated her own side of the story.
In spite of the trauma she had
passed through since last Wednesday, the student, a native of Ijabe, a
border town between Osun and Kwara states, says she is happy that the
embarrassment she received from the controversy that surrounded the birth of
her baby has turned into a blessing for her.
She says the baby’s birth has
made her more popular and important in the society.
‘God
has the best plan for me’
“Why
would I flush or kill my baby after
going through the pains of carrying him for about good nine months? I am not
heartless and I thank God for my life and the safe delivery. I know God has the
best plan for me and my baby. I seriously appreciate the cleaners for their
assistance because I got here (health centre) before I understood everything
that happened to me.
I am happy that I am alive and
my baby is alive too. I’m also using this opportunity to thank the VC, the
doctors and nurses, my lecturers and everybody because they all stood by me.
They all became my father, my mother and everything to me.
“Right now, I can call myself
a celebrity and definitely I’m going to be greater than a celebrity. My baby
too is going to be great.
Look at the circumstance that
surrounds his birth, just some days old, he is already all over in the news
around the world and everybody is happy to see him or hear about his
story. He will surely go beyond where I am now. He has turned me into a kind
of celebrity. ”
Circumstances
surrounding the baby’s birth
“I was purging all through the
night and I had no idea of what labour pain was all about. Actually, I was
feeling pressed, I can’t call it a labour pain because I was visiting the
toilet all through the night till that morning. I just went to the toilet to go
and purge when I noticed something just came out of me which I found out was
the baby. The baby entered the closet. I was just there shouting,
bleeding and people who saw the blood came out to help me alongside the
baby.
“I was really scared! I was
not expecting a baby. I went to the toilet but seeing a baby was terrifying
because I was not expecting him or her to come out yet. It is absolutely not
true that I took to my heels when people came to help me.
It
happened in Moremi Hall toilet and the toilet is a public one where everybody
takes their bath, fetch water and clean up. So, some people were around
fetching water, having their bath as usual, while I was in the toilet planning
to defecate. My friend called the cleaner for help because she was an elderlywoman. I was very scared and people around too couldn’t help
because we are all young female students. The cleaner later helped to carry the
baby out and brought it to the Health Centre along with me.”
Her
plan for the baby
“I will continue to keep him
more handsome, healthier and nurture him to attain greater height in life. But
what he will become later in life is not for me to decide but he will
definitely become what God wants him to become. I will just try to train him in
God’s way and I am sure His (God) plan for his life will be realised.”
The
bean cake she ate deceived her – CSO
According to the institution’s
Chief Security Officer, Mr. Paul Ogidi, Rotimi thought she had stomach upset
instead of labour pains because of the bean cake she took before going to bed.
“She got to campus late at
night on Tuesday and it was learnt that she could not immediately get
herself something to eat but later resolved to buy beans cake within the
campus. After eating the snack, she complained severely of running stomach,
urinated and defecated at regular intervals.
“She felt her stomach disorder
was caused by the bean cake that she took the previous night – not knowing it
was labour pains.”
Varsity
law does not forbid pregnancy – OAU
Authorities of OAU have blamed
the improper use of the social media for the allegation that Oyinlola attempted
to flush her baby away.
The Head of Public Relations,
Mr. Biodun Olarenwaju, who spoke on behalf of the management, described the
incident as a “social media rumour.”
He said, “Social media is
designed primarily to disseminate information. But in the Nigerian context,
many people disseminate rumours. The only information that should be seen there
should be those persons who have the authority to speak concerning that
particular incident.
“The only truth in the social
media episode is that a bouncing baby boy was delivered in the toilet of the
female hostel in our university. Other tales on the social media were totally
incorrect. Students should not encourage rumour mongering because of the image
of the person involved. They have to be careful not to make rumour the news.”
He explained that it was legal
for the student to have delivered the baby in the school, stating that
universities are institutions for adults.
“It
is not a crime for a student to be pregnant. There is no law or decree that states that a student
should be punished, an adult for that matter, for gettingpregnant. And there is no law in this university that states
that an undergraduate cannot become pregnant,” he added.
‘My
friend didn’t plan to kill her baby’
Rotimi’s friend, Oluwayemisi
Satope, who was in Room 103, Block B of Moremi Hall, together with the
undergraduate mother, the night before the incident, said Oyinlola was willing
to have the baby.
She explained that there was
no attempt by them to kill the boy.
She added, “The truth of the
matter is that we don’t know how to go about it when we saw the baby. It was
our first time and we didn’t want to make a mistake. I had to call Mama Cleaner
to assist us. Immediately it happened, I was the first person to shout for help
and two cleaners appeared to assist.
“Diana (Rotimi) had to spend
the night on campus to enable her to prepare for her 8:00 am examination the
next day, because she stays off-campus. That mid-night, she started
complaining of stomach upset and was visiting toilet regularly. A few
minutes to 7:00am, she went to the toilet to defecate but delivered a
baby.”
Students
name baby after VC
And as soon as the birth and
survival of the baby became known on campus, students in their characteristic manner,
launched into an unsolicited naming feast for the baby. Before the official
naming ceremony scheduled to hold on Wednesday (tomorrow), OAU students have
named him after the institution’s Vice-Chancellor, Prof. Bamitale Omole.
At the Anglo-Moz Car Park of
the university, they gathered and named the baby Moremigbemi
(Moremi-blesses-me), Oriyomi (My-head-saves-me), Oluwadayisi
(God-protects-this), Eniolorunopa (He-who-God-does-not-kill), Bamitale
(Be-with-me-permanently) Omole.
Others at the Moremi Hall
named the baby Orisamoremi (Deity Moremi), Moremidayisi (Moremi-protects-this),
Omomoremi (Child-of-Moremi), Olorunwa (God-exists), Oniyapupo
(One-with-many-mothers) Moremioku (Moremi-is-alive), Iyabo
(Mother-Moremi-is-Back), among others.
Moremi is a mythical legend of
the Yoruba race.
We
forced the door open to rescue Oyinlola, baby – Cleaners
Also, the two cleaners, Mrs.
Shipebi Grace and Mrs. Cecilia Ologbenla, in a chat with our
correspondents, said there was no evidence to prove that Oyinlola wanted to
kill her baby.
The cleaners noted that they
had to force the door open when they were called to ensure the safety of
Oyinlola and her baby who was crying.
According to them, the baby
was in the water closet when they entered the toilet.
“She
would not have wanted to attempt to kill the baby the way we saw her. She only
panicked when we forced the door in. We had to force the door in because of the
cry of the baby. In fact, it was one of them that came to call us, but you know some students are impatient. They didn’t confirm what
happened before they started spreading rumour.”
Undergraduate
father keeps mum
Meanwhile, efforts made by our
correspondents to speak with the baby’s father proved abortive. He is a 400
Level student of Mechanical Engineering, and is sitting for the second semester
examination currently on at the institution.
One of his friends who spoke
on the condition of anonymity explained that the young father is very sober
about the development.
The
friend alleged that the young man and Rotimi
had been friends for some time. Along the line, Oyinlola got pregnant and they
decided not to abort it in order not to compound their ‘sin’.
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