She said: “I’m a struggling widow. I have three kids. One is 15, the second is 12 and the third is 10. I’m a trader. I leave home in the morning and come back at night. Whenever I return, neighbours usually complain about Abdullahi; how he usually goes to different places to eat.
Sometimes, he would go with his friends to a place called Agbele-Kale to swim. He’s just stubborn and doesn’t listen! He’s my brother’s son. I’ve been taking care of since he was a baby.” Recalling the incident of that fateful Sunday that led to her inflicting blade cuts on the boy’s hands, Olayinka said Abdullahi was like someone without home training. She narrated: “He usually goes to parties to eat.
He was behaving like someone who doesn’t have parents or like someone who has no home training. When I returned on Saturday, neighbours said I should warn him. On Sunday, he went out again. Food was ready, but he was nowhere to be seen. I was angry.
I used the blade on his two hands. I never knew it would be that bad!” Asked why she used a blade instead of a cane on the boy, Olayinka said: “Anytime I want to beat him, he would run away, forcing me to chase him. But what happened that day was the work of the devil. Yes, I poured pepper on the wounds. I only wanted to make him to be a good boy.”
Kneeling and crying profusely, Olayinka begged the police at Oke-Odo Police Station to give her a second chance. But the Divisional Police Officer, Mr. Monday Agbonika, said she would be charged to court, to serve as deterrent to other women who abuse children under their care.
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