My Blog Search

All parcels are

forakin at gmail dot com

Comment notice:

You are free to leave comments on my blogs as long as they are polite, reasoned and within the context of what I have written.

I will NOT entertain insults, abuse or expletives; your strength of emotion should be expressed without resorting to uncouth expression.

Since, it is my blog, I reserve the right to accept, review, edit without losing the context or delete the comment - if it does not meet standards of decent and polite discourse.

Finally, your comments cannot be anonymous, please give a name when leaving a comment.

Thanks for reading my blog and leaving a comment.

My Popular Tags

                                                           

My Mini Search

 

My Moon Days

««Nov 2009»»
SMTWTFS
1
23
4
5
6
7
8
91011
12
1314
15
16
1718
19
2021
22232425262728
2930

My Flickr Badge

www.flickr.com
This is a Flickr badge showing public photos from akinnld. Make your own badge here.

Child twice raped by boys and parental abandonment

posted Sunday, 26 July 2009

A girl raped by boys

In fact, this is the blog I planned to write but the last blog [1] had become too long an introduction to remain as one blog.

In Phoenix, Arizona, in the United States, an 8 year old girl is lured with sweets into a scheme that must have been contemplated, analysed, planned, hatched and then executed by four boys aged between 9 and 14.

She was entranced by their entreaties, took the bait and got held down for 10 to 15 minutes as she was sexually assaulted [2] by seemingly innocuous and innocent kids. Basically, she was raped by what some parents would call their little angels.

It was her screams that saved her from a more unspeakable ordeal, but whatever had happened was unspeakable already.

Innocence, resistance and consequence

The girl was only 8 years old, it is possible that she would have been none the wiser that she should not take sweets from strangers, but the strangers we are taught to refuse sweets from are grown-ups not our peers.

It is not said if the boys were known to the girl such that she would have had nothing to fear, but once lured and then kidnapped, it is impossible to see how an 8-year old girl would have fared in resisting and overpowering 4 boys, two of whom were 13 and 14 to prevent her defilement.

This is sad enough, that boys can scheme to have an entitlement to sex and force it on an unsuspecting girl without any thought of the consequences of such an outrageously despicable act.

Sex and kids

When sex enters the picture, it is difficult to look at the situation as a boy and girl thing, sex is primarily the domain of adults, experimentation as kids can be seriously life-changing and the sexual abuse of children is just too dastardly for words.

The 14 year old boy will be tried as an adult, which makes one wonder about the age of innocence and the consequence of actions that one takes as a kid only to be visited with force of the law as an adult. Many lives would be destroyed by the evil acts that lasted 10 short minutes.

The bane of fossilised Diaspora

However, back to the girl, the trauma of being raped, defiled, dishonoured, dis-virgined and violated under duress cannot be fathomed, this is a time when child should be able to run into the waiting empathetic arms of their parents and find succour, support, care, concern, love, understanding and strength to begin to put the tragic event into distant memory.

In what I can only call fossilised Diaspora – I’ll explain – the tendency for those in Diaspora to take their root cultures to new lands and then find themselves left behind by both their original culture and their host societies – the parents have disowned the 8-year old girl citing she had shamed them and did not want her back.

Making the victim a perpetrator

I think, this is an outrageous burden to place on a child for all sorts of reasons but one that stands out unforgivably is the implicit view that anyone raped is partly responsible for being a victim.

By saying the 8-year old girl, and remember, this girl is 8 years old, has shamed them, they have placed a greater responsibility than can or should have be expected on a girl who could never have been aware of the trap that was being set for her. An innocent defiled is made guilty by intemperate belief systems.

Twice raped by violation and rejection

The concept of fossilised Diaspora is evident because the people involved are Liberian immigrants living in America, the President of Liberia added her voice to the disquiet when she said the parents were doing “something that is no longer acceptable in our society here.”

By implication, certain societies stigmatise and castigate the rape victim, making the victim just as culpable for being raped. Where the milk of human kindness and compassion should provide succour the family takes on a pall of shame and disowns the victim who becomes an unfortunate victim, twice raped by the act and the rejection.

Thankfully, this horrible act did not happen in Liberia where it probably would have gone unpunished but in the United States. It appears these Liberian immigrants need to be dragged like slaves of old kicking, screaming and so reluctantly into the modern age now.

Parental responsibility

The girl is now under the care of the Arizona Child Protection Services (ACPS) and would probably have to be adopted and raised by some more understanding and loving family.

More so, it speaks volumes about an aspect of African child-rearing that rarely gets spoken about where the provision of shelter, food and education is automatically equated with love when those elements are just matters of basic responsibility.

Because if there was real parental love, it is unlikely that the girl would have been disowned in the moment of her greatest need. In fact, one would have expected the parents to treat this as an affliction as serious as a very ill child, but they had been schooled in despicable old cultural norms which had been superseded by modernity.

This is abandonment, simple

In what smacks of deplorable political correctness, the police have suggested of the parents, “They didn’t abandon the child, they committed no crime. They just didn’t support the child, which led to CPS coming over there.”

I see things differently, if you do not support your 8-year old child because of something that happened to the child apart from death, you have abandoned that child and it should attract the heaviest sanctions possible. This is in the realm of basic parental responsibility in which whatever happened to that child cannot be entirely divorced from the kind of upbringing the parents have given the child.

Withdrawing support is too fanciful for words, just imagine if life support were withdrawn from the parents, what fanciful twist of words would be offered to explain the consequence of that?

The parents need evaluation

In the least, those parents should in the circumstances be deprived of custody of this child, if there are other siblings, the circumstances in that home should be evaluated to ensure that parental support does not get withdrawn on the whim of some other old cultural norm – they should be under the threat of losing the custody of any siblings and future siblings.

Furthermore, like the President of Liberia suggested, they are in need of radical counselling, first to understand parental responsibility in the modern age, then to appreciate the vagaries of child-rearing and also be educated about trauma of child sexual abuse which should be more about how it affects the child and not about their standing in society. Shame on those shameless parents.

No society or community, indigenous or in Diaspora should be able to stand and be counted when keeping face trumps dealing compassionately and tenderly with the sexual abuse of a child and most especially when it is rape.

Sources

[1] Thought Picnic: Preserving childhood sexual innocence

[2] BBC NEWS | Americas | Outcry over disowned US rape girl

tags:                        

links: digg this    del.icio.us    technorati    reddit

AddThis Social Bookmark Button




1. Moji left...
Sunday, 26 July 2009 3:35 pm

Thank you for this post.

There's nothing wrong with being illiterate and poor as obviously this girl's parents are; but their wickedness stems from a deep-seated ignorance that perpetuates itself in 'traditional' African families as you've explained.

The sad aspect is that these bush-man attitudes more often than not victimise females more than they do males. I bet the boys are secretly regarded as heroes in the Liberian community for being so utterly Male.

I sincerely pray that the child finds a better family to love her and help her regain her self confidence.

God help us all.


2. Beauty left...
Sunday, 26 July 2009 4:02 pm :: http://nigeriawhatisnew.blogspot.com/

How do we punish the parents is my take on this one since the animal perpetrators will no doubt face justice.


3. SOLOMONSYDELLE left...
Sunday, 26 July 2009 11:07 pm

"the strangers we are taught to refuse sweets from are grown-ups not our peers."

Those words will never leave my brain.

As a parent, I find what happened to that poor baby distressing. Not sure if those boys witnessed aspects of the gruesome Liberian war but regardless, their actions are reprehensible. And to imagine the little girl has been 'disowned'.


4. Akin Akintayo left...
Sunday, 26 July 2009 11:39 pm :: http://akin.blog-city.com/

Hello Moji,

Thanks for visiting and leaving a comment.

I am struck with utter revulsion by the thought expressed in this statement - "I bet the boys are secretly regarded as heroes in the Liberian community for being so utterly Male"

There is nothing beneficial to maleness in humanity when we behave as animals to prove our manhood - sexual prowess should be the least of what defines man as man, desirable as it might seem for procreation.

Hello Beauty,

Thanks for your comment.

Justice will not be well served until all parties in this sordid tale are evaluated and I think the parents, if parents of more than one child need to be under the threat of losing custody of other children for this act of abandonment.

Hello SolomonS,

Indeed, these issues make you go back over what your learnt as a child to see how any of this might have been avoided or prevented.

I believe this happened within a wider Liberian communiy rather than a cross-community thing.

The case of abandonment calls for serious debate, the way the police are handling it with political correctness is like I said deplorable to say the least.

Society dictates parents have responsibilities and when they decide to shirk those responsibilities there must be clear consequences.

I worry how the girl's life would pan out in the end, but the parents must not walk away from this with any honour or respect.

Thanks for leaving a comment.

Regards,

Akin


5. Abidemi Sanusi left...
Tuesday, 28 July 2009 11:32 am

I know Liberia extremely well and this does not surprise me. I would like to know more details about the circumstances of the girl's family and that of the boys who assaulted her to see just how much it tallies up with my thoughts.

Everyone knows my view on child abuse. I've been vocal about it for long enough. My particular gripe is with Africans who continue to deny and perpetuate this evil even as it reaches pandemic levels.

This Liberian family is doing the only thing they know to do; they do not know better. It is not an excuse. It is a fact. We should grieve for their inherent lack of education in the midst of the land synonymous with knowledge and opportunities.


6. Akin Akintayo left...
Tuesday, 28 July 2009 12:36 pm :: http://akin.blog-city.com/

Hello Abidemi,

Indeed, I am missing that essential piece of information but I suspect all the people involved are Liberian immigrants.

The question of rape seems to be rife in Liberia going from the link on the page of the news story referenced.

But like I said, the element of fossilised Diaspora needs to be taken seriously where bad aspects of culture fail to be jettisoned regardless of influences ad integration in host societies.

Thanks for adding to the discourse.

Regards,

Akin


7. Abidemi Sanusi left...
Sunday, 2 August 2009 8:51 am :: http://www.christianwriteruk.blogspot.co

This is Liberia: http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2009/aug/02/liberia-women-rape


Tag Related Posts

Thought Picnic: The Americe First Principle in Fort Hood

Saturday, 7 November 2009
The trigger for the killings at Fort Hood was pulled long before the guns went off, can the family of the US Army be a family of siblings that feel equal and respected no matter their diversity?

Nigeria: Lawmakers deliberate on the completely absurd

Friday, 30 October 2009
Lawmakers appeal to the sense of patriotism of armed robbers to ceasefireduring World Cup competition.

Childhood: My first Corona Primary School reports

Sunday, 25 October 2009
And so I dug up my school reports from about 37 years ago and review them in the light of today.

A good primary school education should not be sniffed at.

Thought Picnic: Men without integrity

Sunday, 11 October 2009
Too many stories of certain immigrants taking advantage of ladies for legitimising their papers and then moving on.

Thought Picnic: F1 needs serious cleaning up

Friday, 25 September 2009
The F1 scandals have come from drivers threatening to tell all or telling all due to situations not going their way, not because anyone has been honest or full of integrity.

That is an underlying problem that is not being addressed at all.

Childhood: Shocked into adolescence

Sunday, 30 August 2009
Memories of preparation for secondary school come flooding back.

Thought Picnic: AFRICOM another swamp for lethal mosquitoes

Tuesday, 28 July 2009
AFRICOM has no combat mission in Africa but is deploying the Human Terrain System using a defence contractor to map out the core of what makes African tick.

Thought Picnic: Preserving childhood sexual innocence

Sunday, 26 July 2009
A child should not be guilty of being sexually defiled by an adult.

We owe our children a duty of care to ensure that they are not abused and when they are being groomed, the situation must be arrested before it becomes serious.

Child twice raped by boys and parental abandonment

Sunday, 26 July 2009
The plight of children caught in unfortunate circumstances who become victims of old cultural norms.

A child of 8 is raped by 4 boys and her parents abandoned her for shame. Shame on the parents.

Childhood: The railroad back to my roots

Friday, 24 July 2009
Train journeys still hold their fascination for me and I remember one from my childhood. Ones I have now are not as memorable but still rewarding.

Archbishop thought child sexual abuse was not criminal

Thursday, 28 May 2009
And the Archbishop said, "We all considered sexual abuse of minors as a moral evil, but had no understanding of its criminal nature."

Child sexual abuse requires greater parental indignation

Thursday, 21 May 2009
The Catholic Church offered itself as a Christian Charity with personnel to run children's residentail homes which were in fact concentration camps of relentless abuse.

How much more would we stand the non-criminal prosecution of the offenders?

Childhood: The pupils of Corona School, Shamrock House, Bukuru, Jos

Tuesday, 19 May 2009
A complilation of memories of pupils that attended Corona School, Shamrock House, Bukuru, Jos - the comments they left on my many blogs about my childhood memories.

Thought Picnic: Accept my choices or lose your voices

Sunday, 17 May 2009
Some contemporary events leads one on a journey into a possibly fictional childhood and parental conflict - sometimes life could be more real.

Thought Picnic: Justifying MPs Expenses

Wednesday, 13 May 2009
My view on the MPs expenses tittle-tattle and gossip appearing in The Daily Telegraph

Using the law for silent sex

Tuesday, 28 April 2009
A noisily sexually active couple have a Anti-Social Behavioural Order slapped on them with the wife now in jail with the prospect of a jury trail.

Don't think that is what ASBOs were created for, let good commonsense prevail.

Thought Picnic: A world without bad religion

Friday, 24 April 2009
My Thought Picnic looks at how the interpretation of religion and religious views takes away from our community of humanity and denigrates womenfolk.

Thought Picnic: Parental Responsibility

Thursday, 2 April 2009
Another Thought Picnic - Parents have been sent to jail for their children palying truant, however, this time they are in jail for covering the murderous acts of their children. Who is responsible for the situation?

Thought Picnic: A malaise of inexactitudes

Saturday, 7 March 2009
The My Pikin issue is just an extreme manifestation of a malaise we have with not being exact.

Thought Picnic: Drawing the line

Tuesday, 24 February 2009
We draw the lines at something but in the process we seem to draw lines round others without consideration of the lines the others might have drawn.

In commenting about a contemporary issues of auctioning a virginity I explore drawing lines.

Thought Picnic: Kids having kids

Sunday, 15 February 2009
Where children are having kids or people without means of support are having children - something has to give before this becomes a societal trend.

Just another miserable old man

Monday, 2 February 2009
A child that knows no boundaries has the ability to express itself to the point of creative genius or is it a case of just bad parenting.

Singing like a Canary

Sunday, 11 January 2009
Back home from holiday.

Thought Picnic: Palestine

Thursday, 8 January 2009
If Palestine were as well armed as Israel such that they could match Israel, bomb for bomb, missile to missile - would there now be peace in the Middle East for the fear of mutually assured destruction?

Thought Picnic: Our Truth

Friday, 2 January 2009
The happenings in Gaza with the media grab by both Israel and Gaza is summed up in one sentence by the Israelis - We are showing the world our truth.

Is anyone entitled to their own truth - this is the first of my Thought Picnics.

Five years of blogging - Remember the children

Monday, 8 December 2008
My five years of blogging is dedicated to the children who naturally must be loved but are living through hell, some of whom have lost their lives.

Nigeria: Gone is the Jos I knew

Monday, 1 December 2008
My childhood memories of Jos hardly square up with the horrible religious riots that have lead to the death of hundreds.

Our political leaders must have something to pay for these avoidable and unnecessary situations.

Between a patriarch and his children

Sunday, 23 November 2008
My father as a patriarch and his relationship with my siblings and myself, a work in progress.

Mother's love or daughter's hate

Tuesday, 18 November 2008
On the balance of probability it is possible that memories an adult recollects about childhood in a tough home might well be true, but can the parent accept they have been cruel, wrong and bad?

Nigeria: Image allows immigration humiliation

Tuesday, 11 November 2008
A former high-commissioner to South Africa and two sitting senators get the bad mouth treatment at South Africa immigration - well, if we had a better image, none of that stuff would happen.

The Great Peace of Sabbath

Sunday, 14 September 2008
A night out for a Sabbath meal with Christians

Childhood: My aunts saw red

Friday, 12 September 2008
Remembering events in relation to relations who stayed with us in Jos and the power and effects of discipline between the giver and the taker.

Childhood: The fruits of a chicken napping dog

Sunday, 7 September 2008
More childhood stories.

The masterpieces of memory

Saturday, 16 August 2008
More memories of childhood just when I was hardly 6 in Kaduna and on the way to Jos.

Even more memories of a child

Saturday, 9 August 2008
My earliest memories of home schooling and my very first school.

More memories of a child

Thursday, 7 August 2008
Someone left a comment about his memories as a child in the same school I went to as a child. I have published it as a blog.

A child's right to a good name

Sunday, 27 July 2008
Some people do not deserve to be parents by reason of the rotten names they give their children.

Words fail me as I decry the inconsiderate practice of giving children names that would not suit pets, toys or dolls.

Firing of Pardon Attorney hardly a victory for Nigerians

Saturday, 19 July 2008
The Pardon Attorney Roger C. Adams is fired for including racist recommendations in the clemency petition of a reformed Nigerian ex-convict minister.

I sympathise more with the attorney than the Nigerian immigrant.

Nigeria: Lost are the arms of right and wrong

Thursday, 10 July 2008
A girl's arms get amputated after an accident for medical reasons, the girl feels cheated, the parents feel wronged, the doctor feels hounded, the situation seems criminal and many feel ritualised.

Nigeria: Our Culture adopted for criminality

Wednesday, 28 May 2008
Maquerades and Oro are overstaying their welcome menacing people and getting involved in criminality.

Josef Fritzl: A man apart, an arch-demon indeed

Tuesday, 29 April 2008
The case of Josef Fritzl touches on families, communities, society and humanity.

He might not be wanted in the company of all that is good and decent, but he is still a product of some society that comprises human-beings.

Nigeria: Divorce mentions adulterous incest

Tuesday, 15 January 2008
The son of the ex-President is sending social shock waves through the country by attesting that both his father and father-in-law have been in adulterous liaisons with his wife.

He thinks his kids are theirs.

The crime of being raped by justice

Monday, 10 December 2007
Two cases of gang-rape where the judges forgot their vocations and dehumanised the victims with unforgivable punishments and pronouncements.

Religion for bitter or better people

Saturday, 1 December 2007
The teddy-bear affair and the ignorance of mercy

Policing Adedibu and Nigerian Crime

Friday, 16 November 2007
The crime situation in Nigeria from different perspectives of prevention and execution.

De excitement La Catalunya

Saturday, 10 November 2007
Anytime I travel there is always something happening and this is my tale about going to Barcelona.

The Iron Ladies of Liberia

Sunday, 14 October 2007
A documentary about the first year in government of Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, the President of Liberia offers lessons that could be learnt by all governments in Africa.

Catholic Church pays off paedophile accusers

Monday, 16 July 2007
The Catholic Church in Los Angeles pays out $660 million for paedophilia claims - is that from the tithes and offerings?

Egyptian Grand Mufti - FGM is forbidden by Islam

Wednesday, 11 July 2007
FGM is forbidden again in Egypt after an 11-year old girl undergoing the procdure dies from excessive anaesthetic.

Hutu chikin Nigeria? Inaa!

Wednesday, 20 June 2007
Crime, safety and security in Nigeria is a big issue, in the space of weeks four international footballer were attacked in Lagos - this is not good at all.

Justice must not be denied through refusal

Monday, 4 June 2007
Charles Taylor boycotts his trial, but he must not be allowed to boycott justice.

Stoners required for Sharia execution

Friday, 18 May 2007
Sharia law grabs the headlines again in Nigeria, a man has been sentenced to stoning to death by ordination of Allah for rape. Surely, these matters should be handled by civil law.

FGM banned in Eritrea

Sunday, 8 April 2007
The ban on female circumcision in Eritrea marks a great step forward for consigning rotten traditions to history. However, the real work is in the enforcement of the law and the rehabilitation of the victims.

I will tell your husband

Friday, 26 January 2007
Childhood memories of stranger things than fiction in the realm of life and experience.

Rape-bait without the veil

Friday, 27 October 2006
The veil from another perspective gives us a great cause for concern, as it reads like the incitement to rape.

Page turning and sick making

Tuesday, 3 October 2006
Looks like this Mark Foley Scandal is going to make a few heads roll as the storm gathers. The gravity of the damage now depends on if the person is a boy, child, youth, young man or somewhere yet undefined.

Making an ass of a South African policeman

Saturday, 26 August 2006
The minister in charge of safety and security in South Africa suggests that the police should ride donkeys to crime scenes.

London police in an institutionally culpable homicide

Thursday, 24 August 2006
A 22-year old father gets shot by the 14-year old for standing up to their anti-social behaviour in a crime that could have been avoided had the police investigated and prosecuted the stabbing of the same father 7 months before.

Not in my local shop

Thursday, 30 March 2006
A visit to the African goods shop bring idle banter, hilarity and the serious case of disguises aided with hair extensions and skin-lightening cream.