Plight Of Rape Victims: Stakeholders Blame Police, Government Inaction

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The actions and inactions of officers and men of the Nigeria police allegedly fueled by corrupt acts, have been identified as a major challenge in the fight against the growing rate of rape cases in the country.

The situation has been compounded by the slow implementation of the Violence Against Persons (Prohibition) Act, known as the VAPP law.

Reacting to the investigations during an anti-corruption radio programme, PUBLIC CONSCIENCE, produced by the Progressive Impact Organization for Community Development, PRIMORG, on Wednesday in Abuja, the Executive Director, Men Against Rape Foundation, Lemmy Ughegbe, frowned at the high rate of unprofessionalism exhibited by some police personnel handling cases of rape, defilement and just as he criticized the Minister for Women Affairs and Social Development, Pauline Tallen for her lack of interest and lopsidedness in reacting and responding to cases of gender-based sexual violence.

While decrying the steady rise in rape cases, Ughegbe alluded that police personnel in gender units contribute to the problem by body-shaming rape survivors, tampering with evidence, or slowing down investigation. He blamed the police hierarchy for doing too little to punish corrupt officers on the gender desk, stressing that gender-based crimes are encouraged in the long run.

Ughegbe also reminded the Federal Government of Nigeria that it has been failing to restore citizens who have been violated according to the provisions of the law.

According to him; “I’m reminding the government that under the VAPP Act, the government has a responsibility to restore citizens who have been violated. Victims have entitlement to psychosocial support, and the government has been negligent on this responsibility so far, and they must be reminded.

“Rape is a systemic problem, and it also demonstrates the little or no premium placed by government or security agencies to tackle this issue. The situation is rampant, and the investigation typifies what survivors of rape or defilement go through. Again it is because the hierarchy of the police failed to supervise.”

He therefore called for institutional checks and balances to stem the tide of rape going forward, adding that the compromise on rape cases across the country happened because of connivance between police officers, judicial officers, and citizens.

“The police officers are not just the problem. All of us must re-orientate ourselves, renew our values and begin to place values more on humanity than on money. So, except our national efforts and values are renewed in each of us, not just the police because the lawyers also conspire with the police to compromise cases, the police cannot fully on its mess up a case,” Ughegbe stressed.

Similarly, a Developmental Programming Strategist and Promoter of inclusion and diversity, Ene Ede, called on the government and police to be committed to nipping rising rape cases in the bud while joining the call for the full implementation of the VAPP Act in all the states of the federation.

She maintained that having structures that would support the implementation of the VAPP act would reduce gender-based violence. He called on stakeholders and citizens to demand accountability for what is due to victims of gender-based violence from public officeholders.

“It is for us to raise the bar of accountability. The victims have rights that must be fully accounted for, so drag all the institutions available to the table so that they can tell us what must happen.”

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