Found this story on The Nation. So heartbreaking. Read below...
Helen (surname withheld) will be 20 years on October 10. But she now bears a burden that is too heavy for her age. She was gang-raped in January this year and was diagnosed with HIV last month. Due to the heart-rending experience and the medical diagnosis that followed, the once cheerful and vivacious Helen now wears a long face as she carries with her the psychological burden of the experience.
After secondary school in 2008, Helen wanted to further her education, but
being the fifth of 11 children comes with its own challenge. “Na the condition
of no money, na im prevent me from going further,” said Helen when asked why
she had not bothered to continue her education.Helen (surname withheld) will be 20 years on October 10. But she now bears a burden that is too heavy for her age. She was gang-raped in January this year and was diagnosed with HIV last month. Due to the heart-rending experience and the medical diagnosis that followed, the once cheerful and vivacious Helen now wears a long face as she carries with her the psychological burden of the experience.
Despite her background, Helen was
unperturbed. Determined that she would return to school some day, she began
working as a cleaner in a big firm at Lekki, Lagos, from where she hoped to
save for school. She had worked there for almost a year before the tragic
episode that altered her life dramatically took place. It was with a deep
emotion that she recounted her ordeal.
All was quiet and the street lonely
early that Tuesday morning when the unsuspecting lady set out from her Bariga
home to resume her morning shift at work. It was at exactly 5:05am, the same
time she often left home everyday to board a bus some streets away to Lagos
Island. But that morning, something was not right. She noticed five young men
lurking about as she got out of her street’s gate. On seeing their fearsome
appearance, her heart skipped a beat.
Consumed by fear, her first instinct
was to turn and run back into the street, but it was too late. She had been
spotted. “They blocked and grabbed me. They pointed a gun at me and told me to
be quiet and do everything they said I should do, or else they would harm me,”
Helen said before she was overcome by emotion. After a short silence that
seemed ages, she added: “I tried to shout but when I looked around and did not
see anybody except those guys, I was so afraid and did as they said… They,
then, carried me to one corner by the side of the street… (She bowed her head).
They asked me to lie down.” Helen went silent again with head still bowed, to
hold back tears. She said: “I begged them to release me, that I was on my way to
work and that I didn’t have anything to offer them. They told me to shut up,
saying they would waste me, if I didn’t like my life. I begged them to spare my
life.” Her plea touched a member of the gang; he said she should be freed. But
his statement fell on deaf ears, for Helen’s other attackers were determined to
carry out their task to the letter. Fighting back tears, she said: “The others
said he could leave if he wanted to; they then collected my handbag, my purse
and the N5,000 inside with my two phones – one was in my hand. I used its
torchlight; the other was in my Jeans pocket. They removed the phone, pulled
off my trousers and started violating me (Silence)…They asked me to pull off my
clothes. I begged them.”
Her face became contorted as the agony
of the incident swelled her being. Helen became silent again. One could see she
was fighting to hide several conflicting emotions as she recounted. “But was
there no way you could have shouted for help?” the reporter asked in an attempt
to douse the tension. “There was no way I could have shouted because there were
five of them against only me… I was so scared. So, I just kept begging them to
release me.” As her attackers were beginning to enjoy their violent act, they
spotted another young man and lady walking towards them. Helen’s attackers also
pounced on the couple, robbing them of their valuables at gunpoint. Two of them
also raped the second lady. By that time, Helen’s eyes were already swollen,
from her trauma and obvious helplessness in the hands of the crooks. The two
men raped the girl while the other three continued raping me,” she said in a
subdued voice. On how she felt when her violators had their turns, Helen, in
tears, said: “I swallowed my scream, felt very bad and closed my eyes as each of
them…(Silence). For my mind e be like say make I get knife take kill them,
because it was a very painful thing to experience. Before they started, I had
asked if they had condoms but they said ‘No’. ‘’
After they finished, all I could
think of was running to the hospital and getting some drugs or treatment that
could wash everything away from my whole being: my physical body, heart, soul
and all. (Again, she lapsed into another silence). I felt very bad and,
somehow, dirty.” After the incident She ran back home to her sister. Both
ladies cried in silence; they felt ashamed to share with neighbours what had
happened. As if that was not enough, while nursing the psychological trauma of
the assault she got, another shocker happened to her on the same day. Helen
discovered that her violators were her neighbours. “I recognised them: two of
them live opposite my house. Before that time, I did not notice them. I see
them every day and cringe; I’m always in fear each time I see them,” she said.
Three months after Besides the traumatic rape, Helen has fallen into a
worrisome medical condition. Last month, she was diagnosed with HIV at the
General Hospital where she was rushed to after she was raped. Before then,
Helen said she had been “negative”, adding that she knew through a test she did
some time back. “When I went there when it first happened, they asked me some
questions, gave me some drugs and told me to come back after three months for
more tests.
The three-month period lapsed last
month. The hospital did the followup test and found that I have become
HIV-’positive’. ‘’I felt bad, very bad; and I cried. In fact, the doctor tried
to calm my mind; but I kept on crying that ‘I’m finished’. I wanted to take my
life because I never expected this to happen to me. They told me life still
goes on and that I can still live my life to the fullest. They say people with
HIV are can be healthier than those who are negative with the help of drugs.
Before I left the hospital, I cried and begged them to help me because I did not
plan to live on drugs for rest of my life,” she said. With tears dripping
freely and looking straight at the reporter as if to find answers on her face,
she continued: “What kind of life can one live now? I feel so bad; I feel so
weak and I am asking myself: what did I do wrong in this life to deserve this?
What will happen to my dream of going to school? I have not been able to save
for school, and I now am treating HIV.”
The news of her status has added more
sadness to her family who were still recovering from the shock of her
violation. “When my parents heard the news, they were very sad and they all
cried,” Helen said amid tears. The 20-year-old has since turned an advocate,
seeking justice against her attackers. After living in fear for months, the dread
of the rapists forced her and her sister to relocate last weekend. The move has
emboldened to seek for justice, feeling she is beyond their reach. “I want
justice. I need help. I want those men to go to jail for what they did to me
and perhaps many other ladies in the area. These people cannot be allowed to go
free. Everybody knows them as thieves in the area; they do not go to work or
school but just hang around all day doing nothing. Still nobody has done
anything about it. It is almost as if they are using charms. Their father is a
very aggressive landlord. I see them always and I’m always in fear; that’s why
we packed out of the house last weekend. You won’t believe that till we packed,
my attackers are still using my phone,” she said. Helen’s sister, Stella, who
was also in her 20s, said the whole incident has left the family heart-broken.
Stella, who learnt a comforting hand to her sister, said: “We felt so weak and
very unhappy, but there is nothing else we can do but to support her and pray
that those crooks would be made to pay and suffer for what they did to my
sister.”
Source: LindaIkeji's Blog