Thursday 10 March 2016

Controversy as Another 15-year-old Schoolgirl is Abducted, Converted to Islam and Married in Zaria (Photo)

A fresh controversy has broken out in Zaria, Kaduna State, over alleged abduction, conversion to Islam and forceful marriage of a 15-year-old school girl, Ifeoma Nicodemus.
Ifeoma Nichodemus
 
An angry father, Nicodemus Odugusi, has cried out that his 15-year old daughter, Ifeoma Nicodemus was abducted on September 14, 2014, when she was 14 and had since been held against her will for the past 18 months by one Shehu Abdullahi, who runs an Islamic school in the Samaru area of Zaria.
 
The police however denied that Ifeoma was abducted, saying her parents were merely twisting the story. Abdullahi also said he did not abduct or marry Ifeoma, saying he was merely keeping custody of her based on the order of a court.
 
However Ifeoma who is from Ebonyi State and resides in Zaria with her parents at the time of her alleged abduction, was a student of Total Child Bible Secondary School in Samaru, Zaria, and told Premium Times that she was never abducted by anyone, describing Abdullahi as a father figure to her.
 
Human rights lawyer, Ezekiel Dyagas, said Ifeoma has been held against her will for the past 18 months in the home of Abdullahi, adding that when the girl was traced to the home of the Islamic teacher by her family, Abdullahi simply told them he had duly married the 14-year-old after converting her to Islam.
 
Abdullahi however denied ever making any such remark, saying he was already married and could not have claimed to have taking Ifeoma as wife.
 
In a telephone interview with Ifeoma’s father, he said he had been in agony since his daughter was taken away from him. The schoolteacher lamented that the most painful part of it all was 'that he knows where his daughter is being kept but is powerless against the forces that are holding her hostage.'
 
Narrating his ordeal, he said on September 14, 2014 when his daughter did not return home, he searched everywhere for her, adding that the following day, September 15, 2014, he received a call from a school in Zaria informing him that his missing daughter was with them; that she had converted to Islam and was now married to Abdullahi.
 
The embattled father said for the last 18 months, he had been engaged in a lone fight with Abdullahi who he said mocked every attempt to free Ifeoma from his captive, adding that she was in SS2 at the time of her alleged abduction, and that he reported the matter to the Samaru Police Station in Zaria and subsequently got a lawyer to file a case of abduction in court.
 
The lawyer, Dyagas, said he suspected conspiracy in Ifeoma’s case, saying he had since found that the proceedings of the case against Abdullahi was not recorded. But in his reaction, Abdullahi said it was Ifeoma herself who approached a Sharia court asking to be converted to Islam.
 
He said following her conversion, the court ordered him to keep custody of her after she stubbornly refused to return to her parents, adding that the police was called in to persuade her to return to her parents, but she refused especially after her father threatened that she would not be allowed to practice Islam in his home.
 
"We even engage people close to her family to persuade her to return to her parents, but stood her ground. So I pleaded with her parent to be patient while we continue to try to reconcile her with them. I was the one who called the attention of her parent, and asked them to come and take her home, but she refused to follow them."
 
The Divisional Police Officer in charge of Samaru, where the case was first reported, said the problem was not with Abdullahi, but with Ifeoma.
 
"She converted herself to Islam, and then refused to return home. We intervened here, the commissioner of police intervened, and three times she ran away from her parents. The court then handed her over to Mallam Shehu and co. for custody.

"One day, we brought her to the station, and asked her parents to take her away. She refused. She said she preferred to be detained in our station rather than go home with her parents. We couldn’t keep her in the station because if she disappears, the commissioner of police will hold us responsible," the DPO, who refused to give his name, said. 

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