Within
few minutes of settling down in a secluded place – off the campus – where
Bimbola (not real name) agreed to narrate her ordeal to our correspondent last
Monday, the dry white handkerchief she was holding became soaked with tears.
She
tried to stop weeping for a while, but she couldn’t resist it, and the more her
friend – who followed her to the meeting – tried to calm her down, the more she
struggled to hold back her tears. What she passed through in August was
painful, unimaginable and dehumanising. In fact, she might not be able to
forget that night in her life.
Ever
since the incident, everything about her has changed, according to her friend.
In
the night of August 13, 2015 – around 12 midnight – she said she and her
roommate had returned from a night reading class in preparation for their
forthcoming exam in November, locked their room and were about to sleep when
they heard their hostel mates jamming their doors, screaming and walking up the
hostel stairs.
Before
they knew what was happening, the men were at their door and expectedly, they
forced the door open. “Come out now or we will kill you,” she recalled what the
men told her and her roommate, and with fear and trembling, the girls did their
bidding.
Three
hefty fearful-looking men, clad in black polos and jeans, armed with guns,
machetes and axes had stormed their hostel – located in the Under G Area of
Ladoke Akintola University of Technology, Ogbomoso, Oyo State – and demanded
that all the students, both male and female, should gather in one room.
While
one of the hoodlums stayed with the students, pointing guns at them should they
‘misbehave,’ the other two locked the entrance to the hostel, ransacked all
rooms one after the other, stole the students’ laptops, money, debit cards,
tablets and mobile phones.
But
even after stealing all their property, the robbers were not done. The next
command they gave the students was what Bimbola has not yet got over with.
She
narrated, “They raped some girls in our presence, but not only that, they asked
us to start having sex with ourselves. They called from among us a guy and a
girl and asked them to have sex with themselves, right in everybody’s presence.
They threatened to use their weapons on us if we didn’t cooperate. Then they
asked all of us to strip naked. Since it was in the night, most of us ladies
already had only our night gowns on, while most of the guys were just putting
on boxers. They said we should all be naked. When they were satisfied, they
called another pair of students to do the same thing and told everybody to
watch.
“For
about three hours, they dehumanised us, humiliated us. Unfortunately, nobody in
the next hostel knew what was going on; if anyone knew, they would have helped
us to call the police or the Student Union Government officials.”
But
what was more pathetic about Bimbola’s story was that she didn’t just witness
the whole action; she was also asked to have sex with a guy she never dated.
“Everything happened like it was a dream. They pointed at a guy I knew as my
junior and asked him to do ‘it’ with me. When I refused, they slapped me and I
fell. I had no option than to do it. I looked at my roommate and she was
already shedding tears for me. How humiliated I was!” she cried.
She
further told our correspondent, “It was not a night to remember. I wish I could
erase it from my memory. My friend and I returned to the hostel that night
after reading in the school because our exam is fast approaching. If I knew
something like that would happen, I would have stayed in the school till the
morning, but I needed to prepare for the following day’s work. I had just
finished having a shower when my roommate and I observed something was wrong.
There was no light, so we couldn’t see properly, but we observed that our
hostel mates were all jamming their doors at some men’s command.
“They
cramped all of us in one of the rooms upstairs and we were all frightened. My
parents are not yet aware of this incident and I don’t wish to share it with
anyone again. I only agreed to speak to you because my friend here encouraged
me to and I feel something should be done by the authorities concerned to stop
this barbarism. I know I’ll be fine soon.”
Since
July when they resumed for the semester, the students of LAUTECH have been
witnessing robbery attacks and rape by the same set of unknown men – who call
themselves ‘Three MOPOLs’ each time they barge into their victims’ hostels.
Though
the institution is non-residential, individuals and private organisations
provide accommodation for the students around the university.
The
Welfare Officer of the Student Union Government of the institution, Ridwan
Okedara, said he could not count the number of calls he had received ever since
the incident started occurring in July up till about two weeks ago. He said it
was unfortunate that the hoodlums had yet to be apprehended.
He
said, “I’ve received calls in the past four months almost every passing night
about this incident. Victims and eyewitnesses usually say the robbers were
always three and they would tell them they were the ‘Three MOPOLS,’ but we are
not sure if they are not even more than that. For instance, there were some
nights when I received calls that the robbers were operating in the Adenike
Area (a popular students’ residential area near the school) and I would quickly
call our security officers to go to the said hostel, but few minutes later, I
would receive a call that they were operating somewhere else.
“Before
the security people could get there, the robbers would have left and we would
hear they had started operating somewhere else. We don’t know their tactics
yet. From what we have heard from eyewitnesses, they would enter a hostel,
pretend as if they were looking for somebody and before the students knew it,
they would threaten them with guns and machetes and ask all of them to be
inside one particular room after collecting their phones, laptops and money.
They ask the students to strip off their clothes – both male and female, then
ask them to start having sex with themselves. They could call a male from say
200 Level and ask him to have sex with say a 400 Level female student.
“These
robbers rape our students and then ask the students to have sex with
themselves. We’ve heard a case when the robbers used white handkerchiefs to
wipe the private parts of the students after the act. We are also suspecting
ritualism here. They go to hostels anytime from 8pm to 1am and from
eyewitnesses’ accounts, there was usually no light anytime the hoodlums carried
out their operation.”
This
is exactly what another victim of robbery in September by the same ‘Three
MOPOLs’ said, who spoke with Saturday
PUNCH on the condition of anonymity at a restaurant outside the
school premises.
Meanwhile,
Okedara has information about some of the hostels where the incidents [rape and
robbery] had taken place, but pleaded to be kept secret to avoid undue
stigmatisation of the victims, which is perhaps understandable.
The
other victim who spoke with our correspondent said, “It was very dark and there
was no light to see their faces when they came to our hostel. They told us they
were the ‘Three MOPOLS,’ and mere looking at them, we could not imagine how
they were able to gain entry into our hostel and ordering all of us to go
inside one room. We were told to take off our clothes and they raped some of
the girls. They didn’t rape me and they didn’t ask me to have sex with anyone,
but they stole my laptop and phone. It was traumatic. It was like experiencing
hell that night.”
The
President of the school’s chapter of the Women Against Rape, Sexual Harassment
and Sexual Exploitation, who is a nursing student in the institution and also
the Vice-President, the National Union of Campus Journalists, Israel Fawole,
said the Federal Ministry of Women Affairs and the national body of the Women
Against Rape organisation had already been informed about the issue and that
they had taken interest in the matter.
He
further said some of the victims had been taken in for rehabilitation at
undisclosed locations due to the trauma they had experienced.
He
said, “Not all of them are willing to open up, but some have come forward and
they are being taken care of. Rape is an epidemic and it must stop. Some of the
victims are undergoing rehabilitation now. Most of them are shy to talk about
it, but recently, we organised a peace walk against rape, where female students
had to protest against the incident.
“It
is so unfortunate that unwanted visitors would barge in, threaten our students
with axes and guns, ask the opposite sexes to start having sex in their
presence and other students. They collect the students’ property, rape them and
still tell them to commit sex with one another. We are tired of this mess.”
Forced into lesbianism
Another
terrible aspect about the incident is when the hoodlums ordered female students
whom they had taken hostage to make love among themselves, thereby practically
forcing them to commit an act of lesbianism. An official of the institution,
with whom some of the victims and eyewitnesses had shared their ordeal with,
told Saturday PUNCH.
The
official, who pleaded anonymity, said some female students confided in him that
they were asked to have sex with other female students during the robbery
operations.
“I
believe it is more than what meets the eyes. This is not an ordinary robbery.
Normal robbers take what they want and leave. They would not ask students to
all be in one room, tell them to go unclad, rape the female ones and still tell
their victims to have sex with one another. It is a disgusting thing and as a
parent myself, I have been unhappy since I started hearing the bad experiences
of some of our students,” he said.
Bimbola
had also told our correspondent that the robbers called a female student and
asked her to have sex with another female student in the night they attacked
them.
When students become vigilantes
This
situation could perhaps be ascribed to poor insecurity for the students of the
institution, with some of the students blaming the situation on both the police
(for allegedly extorting and not protecting them) and the school management
(for not intervening on time when the crisis started).
For
several weeks, the students became their own security personnels. While the
male ones carried planks to scare off the ‘unseen’ criminals and burned tyres
in the night, the female students cheered up their male colleagues.
The
SUG Welfare Officer, Okedara, said, “The insecurity in the school is
unfortunate. This started a week after we resumed for this semester. On the
first day of our resumption, we had an issue with the police, which led to a
serious misunderstanding. The SUG had a confrontation with the police then.
They used to patrol hostels and in the process did extort our students,
according to victims. They would stop students on the road and probably if they
saw expensive phones or tablets on them, they would ask where they got them
from. Their mentality is that those using ‘big’ phones are ‘Yahoo-yahoo’ people
(internet fraudsters).
“We
got several reports from our students on this issue and we couldn’t take it
anymore. The president of the SUG challenged them and this led to a fracas. We
went to the station at Owode to report to the DPO, but they attacked us. We
went to the Soun (the traditional ruler) of Ogbomoso and the resolution there
was that if we didn’t want them to be coming again, they wouldn’t come because
we really didn’t see any impact they were making then apart from extorting
students. We wanted them to stop coming because of the bad eggs among them, but
the Commissioner for Police has intervened in the matter.
“Few
days after this confrontation with the police, the incident became rampant and
this has turned almost all of us to vigilantes. We stay late at night, keeping
vigil and burning tyres, just to scare off the perpetrators of this crime. When
we started hearing of this act, all students usually went to bed early, but we
found out that it was giving these ‘three MOPOLs’ an advantage. We sensitised
ourselves and we decided to stay late at nights.”
The
President of the SUG of the institution, Olatunde Bakare, said he had been
personally leading a team of student vigilantes since July due to the alleged
nonchalant attitude of the police and the school management previously.
He
said, “It is a bad experience and it saddens my heart that something this
disgusting is happening to our students. When it started, we thought it was
something we could curb on our own, so we took to the streets. I led a group of
students who became watchmen overnight. We constituted a security committee on
our own to be our own security personnels.
“We
have both the male and female students keeping vigil. We don’t carry guns, but
only burn tyres and we hold planks, just to let the robbers know we are not
sleeping. We stay up till 3am and this has affected students, especially those
who have lectures early in the morning, but we cannot rest until we apprehend
these criminals. The exam is starting next month and we hope this will not
happen again.
“We
found out that anytime the operation was going on in, say Area A, we would get
a call that it was going on in Area B. We would have apprehended the criminals,
but for the diversion in reports. We couldn’t involve the police initially
because the bad eggs there were just extorting our students. The aspect of
ritualism is more disgusting to me.
“Because
the school is non-residential, it has exposed us to many hazards. We protested
that the school management should do something and we told them we want the
school to become residential so that there could be more security. We believe
if the management could work on our resolution in reviewing the edict which
established the school, it could become residential. Hostels could be built on
the campus so that the school security would help a lot in protecting our
students.”
Anger, protests
Bakare,
like other students Saturday
PUNCH spoke with, also said protests had been staged against the
school management on the issue because rather than the school looking deeply
into the issue and responding appropriately, they responded that because it is
a non-residential institution, they had the responsibility of protecting
students only when they were on the campus and not when in their hostels.
The
response of the management did not in any way sound sensible to the students.
“The
management’s claim was that the school is non-residential, but when it became
unbearable, they called a meeting of all the stakeholders and they have started
doing something. The DSS, SARS, OPC and local vigilantes too are now with us.
We called on the Ibadan Electricity Distribution Company and they too have
improved on supplying electricity to hostels. If those criminals try it again,
we will apprehend them,” Bakare boasted.
‘We’re beefing up security’
The
Public Relations Officer of the institution, Mr. Lekan Fadeyi, said the
insinuation that the university management didn’t do anything on the rape and
robbery incidents was far from the truth. He said the school had, before the
incidents, teamed up with landlords of students’ hostels in hiring security
officials to patrol the hostels.
He,
however, said it was a challenge providing security for the over 4,000 students
of the institution, being a non-residential one.
He
said, “We seek the understanding of the students to know the challenge facing
the management. The edict establishing the school does not in the first place
allow us to have hostels. Be that as it may, we would like members of the
public to know that long before the recent ugly happenings, there was a
standing security committee of the university – members include representatives
of all security agencies and I can state categorically that all the main
security arms of the government have served diligently well in this committee.
“Even
in the most recent incidents, the management summoned a meeting of all
landlords, agents and students to brainstorm on ways of increasing security
awareness and combating crime. It went further to call an emergency meeting of
the university governing council.
“As
parents themselves, the members of the council frowned at the appalling
situation and granted all requests of the management aimed at putting immediate
stop to any crime against the students. The university has long before now been
funding a joint patrol of security in areas popularly inhabited by its students
and the management is not willing to stop at anything when it comes to
guaranteeing the safety of lives and property of our students.”
Culled
from PUNCH
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