By Kamsi Anayo
A grandmother, identified as Oluchukwu Nwosu, is currently in the police net for stealing and selling her daughter’s three-month old baby boy for N50,000 in Anambra state.
The incident occured in Nnewi, Nnewi North Local Government Area of the state, where the culprit was said to have stolen the child from her daughter (the child’s mother) just shortly after she gave birth to him.
The child was, however, rescued through the intervention of the state’s Commissioner for Women Affairs and Social Welfare, Mrs Ify Obinabo, whose Ministry began monitoring the case and tracking the suspected buyers of the baby after the child’s mother, Ijeoma Nwosu, cried to her office to seek her intervention.
The child looks extremely malnourished, as the person who bought him, Evelyn Egwuatu, had been feeding him only soya beans and water for the past three months he had been in her custody.
It was gathered that the buyer was connected for the illicit deal through one Mrs Ebelechukwu Uba and Mr Tochukwu Asiegbu, who served as the middlemen in the illegal transaction.
Everyone involved in the case has, however, been apprehended.
While the buyer of the baby, Mrs Egwuatu said she gave one of the middlemen (Mrs Uba) N200,000 to obtain the child for her; it was gathered that Uba paid the grandmother of the child N50,000, gave her co-middleman (Mr Asiegbu) N30,000, and kept the rest for herself as her profit from the transaction.
The 45-year-old grandmother of the child, claimed she sold the baby due to hardship in the country, as they found it difficult to feed themselves since the child was delivered.
She also revealed that her daughter gave birth to the child outside wedlock, adding that “this is the third child her daughter has delivered outside wedlock.”
She also said that the other two children delivered by the daughter are currently in the State’s Community Children’s Home in Awka.
She, however, pleaded for forgiveness, claiming that she only sold the third child to raise money to buy food, due to intense hunger in the land.
Commenting on the matter, the
Commissioner for Women Affairs and Social Welfare condemned the evil act.
Obinabo lamented over the welfare and health condition of the malnourished child, as well as the pains the child’s mother had been passing through since the disappearance of her baby.
She said the buyer of the child was able to subject him to such lamentable condition because he was illegally adopted without the knowledge of the state government, hence, was not being checked upon by the Ministry’s officials who usually monitor and ensure the welfare of every child legally adopted in the state.
She expressed strong worry over the ongoing illegal adoption practices in the state, despite the government’s continued efforts to eliminate such acts.
While noting that the apprehended suspects will be prosecuted, Obinabo further issued a stern warning to those involved in such unlawful acts to desist or face the full weight law.