Miss Mercy Okpithe joined the Dance
Troupe on the Orientation Camp of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) in
Anambra State in November 2012. But four months later she was severely beaten
up by the Camp Commandant.
SunNews Reported
that Captain S.O. Beke attacked her about 11:00p.m on Monday, March 18, this
year. She allegedly fainted and was rushed to the camp clinic. The following
day, she was transferred to the Anambra State University Teaching Hospital,
Awka. At the hospital, she was diagnosed with dislocation of coccyx, a small
triangular bone at the base of the spinal column.
The hospital further referred her to
the National Orthopaedic Hospital, Igbobi, Lagos, for special attention. It was
gathered that she might be flown abroad for surgery.
Mercy was visited by the
correspondent in her home at Lagos. As she lay down on a couch in their living
room, the young lady writhed in pains, even as she struggled to answer the
reporter’s questions. “When the Batch A corps members were in the Orientation
Camp in March, this year, the NYSC officials invited members of the Dance
Troupe to the camp to teach the new corps members how to dance. We got to the
camp in the evening of Sunday, March 17.
“We were 15 all together: 11 boys
and four girls. The girls were not meant to stay together in the same room with
the boys. But we had to because there was no vacant room. The following
morning, the NYSC State Coordinator gave a directive that a separate room
should be given to the girls. But the officials could not find a vacant room
for us.
“So, they put us in one of the rooms
occupied by some Batch ‘A’ female corps members. We took two mattresses each to
the place. There were no bunks. So, we spread the mattresses on the ground.
Thereafter, the other three girls slept but I was still awake. I was listening
to music on my phone, using an earpiece.
“Around 11:00p.m., some soldiers
came into the room. They were both males and females. I felt it was a normal
thing because they did the same thing when I was in the camp for orientation
exercise in November 2012. Then, I noticed that a female soldier was arguing
with one of my friends, Ifedayo Fakehinde.
“Then, the female soldier forcefully
removed one of the mattresses which she slept on. Ifedayo sought to know her
offence and the soldier hit her. I quickly rose up and caught her as she was
falling. Otherwise, she would have hit her head against the wall. But she
sprained her hand.
“The incident caused a scene. Many
corps members came out and argued with the soldiers. As this was going on,
Ifedayo was crying. We calmed her down. Then, the NYSC Schedule Officer came
around. He sought to know what happened. As I was explaining what I knew about
the incident to him, I heard the voice of the Camp Commandant telling all the
corps members to go inside.
“Before I finished my explanation,
the commandant came and pushed me. I sought to know why he pushed me. But he
pushed me again. I told him to stop pushing me because he could not push his
sister like that. But he continued until he pushed me to the wall. Then, he
kicked me from the ground and I hit the ground with my back. I couldn’t move.
Then, I heard other soldiers saying ‘die, die, die’ till I passed out.”
According to a sourse, the Schedule
Officer ran to call the State Coordinator, Mrs. I.B. Ekpe, when the commandant
was purportedly beating the corps member.
Mr. Solomon Okpithe, Mercy’s father,
said an official of the NYSC called him on phone in the afternoon of Tuesday,
March 19, telling him that Mercy was involved in an accident and that he should
come to Awka immediately.
The official told Mercy’s father to
come with somebody who would stay in the teaching hospital to take care of
Mercy. When he got to the hospital with his wife at about 12:30p.m the
following day, they were shocked to hear that she was brutalised by the camp
commandant. Okpithe said the first thing that came to his mind was how to save
his daughter’s life. He sought to see the Chief Medical Director (CMD) of the
teaching hospital but could not see him until about 7:00p.m when he came out
from the theatre.
“I asked the CMD about my daughter’s
condition, but he said the hospital could not handle it and he would refer her
to Enugu. I told him that I was from Lagos and asked if he could refer her to
any hospital in Lagos. Then, he said he would refer her to Igbobi. Immediately,
he instructed the doctor that was in charge to write the letter.
“On Thursday morning, we were at
Igbobi. The doctors at the hospital tried but the sad thing is that they told
us they could not handle it too. They said it’s not just an orthopaedic case
but something that has to do with the spine. They treated her and asked us to
take her home. Then, they gave an appointment,” he said.
On the next appointment day,
according to Okpithe, the hospital said the first option, which was the
treatment by orthopaedic doctors, had failed. “They said they were taking
another option now and if it fails, the third option would be a surgery.”
Okpithe, who has since been responsible for his daughter’s hospital bills,
disclosed that Mrs. Ekpe promised the family that NYSC would reinburse whatever
amount spent on the treatment, adding that Ekpe said she had informed the
national secretariat of NYSC in Abuja about the development and had also
written a letter to the NYSC in Lagos State about the incident.
“I have received calls from one Mrs.
Daniel from the NYSC Office, Lagos, telling me I should accept their sympathy
on my daughter. But on the other hand, Mrs Ekpe never stated the cause of the
dislocation. I know she’s doing that to protect the officer.” Okpithe, an
engineer, urged the Chief of Army Staff to ensure proper reform of the army,
especially those in charge of NYSC.
He also advised the Federal
Government to provide necessary items for corps members on the camp. The issue
of inadequate mattresses, he said, caused the problem. When contacted on phone
to react to the claims, Captain Beke neither confirmed nor denied the incident.
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