A textile business woman, identified as Mrs. Olajoke Adesipe, has
accused popular musician cum Director-General for women development,
Onyeka Onwenu of assault. According to her, Onwenu allegedly directed
security officers to throw her wares out of her shop and as a result
beat her up.
In her petition to the National Human Rights
Commission dated March 3, 2014, Adedipe wrote that she was forcefully
evicted from her shop at the National Centre for Women Development,
Abuja on the order of Onyeka, who is the Director-General of the centre.
“I am a yearly tenant and my current tenancy would not end until
December, 2014, yet they tried pushing me out. On January 21, 2014, I
heard that the DG might likely eject me even when my rent is still valid.
I got a letter to vacate the premises within three days on January
28,2014, while another letter was given to me on February 4. I wrote a
letter to Onwenu on February 6, and sent her a text message three days
later seeking an audience.
She gave me an appointment for the following day and after narrating her
story, the DG apologized and said that a formal apology letter would be
written by the centre to her. Onwenu said I should vacate the shop but
promised that I would be relocated to the shopping complex within the
premises. I agreed but insisted that I would only vacate the shop when
given an allocation letter.”
However, on February 13, the businesswoman allegedly got a call from Onwenu asking why she had not moved out of the shop.
“I told her that nobody had given me an allocation letter for the new
shop as she promised. She said if I failed to move out by February 14,
she would send for the State Security Service to chase me out. On
February 14, I was at the centre early. I heard that Onwenu, in company
of her security personnel, had forced my shop open. I ran there and saw
her supervising the forceful ejection without any prior court or police
order.
While trying to take pictures of the scene with my phone for evidence,
Onyeka Onwenu ordered her men to confiscate my phone. In the struggle
for the phone, I was beaten and dragged on the ground, while my cloth
and bags were torn.” Adesipe disclosed in the petition.
Confirming the incident, the Legal Adviser, Women centre, Mohammed
Suleiman, explained that Adesipe was not a legal tenant of the centre,
adding that she has been allocated another shop which she refused to
accept. |
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