The pregnant woman who was allegedly attacked by three policemen lost her baby. 
Sun News reports below
“Take me to my son, I want to see him”, Chika Elekawachi pleaded with 
family members who were still lost in thought on how to break the news 
of the death of her baby. Chika is the eight-month pregnant woman who 
was allegedly brutalized by three policemen attached to the Satellite 
Police Division in Lagos on Sunday, July 19. The policemen 
allegedly stripped the woman naked after accusing her of resisting 
arrest. 
She was allegedly assaulted before she was dragged to the 
police station. Her family members later rushed her to Safe Hands 
Hospital, old Ojo road, Amuwo, Lagos, after she allegedly passed out at 
the police station.
 Her family members got the shock of their lives 
when the doctor on duty said in the presence of policemen that Chika was
 hale and hearty. Unfortunately, she started bleeding at about 11pm on 
Monday when she was rushed into the theatre for surgery. Although the 
baby boy was delivered on Tuesday alive, and rushed to Outreach 
Hospital in Festac town, Lagos, which had a functional incubator, the 
baby died less than 48 hours after.
 Her family members have cried 
out over what they described as an attempt by the police to sweep the 
matter under the carpet. This is even as the Lagos police command had 
ordered the immediate arrest and deten¬tion of the suspects soon after 
the authouri¬ties learnt that the baby had died.
 Chika’s version
 Chika told Saturday Sun reporters on her hospital bed before the 
surgery that about 8pm on Sunday, she left two of her kids at home and 
was heading to a shop at Agboju, in Oriade Local Council Development 
Area (LCDA) to buy some foodstuffs for the house.
 “I suddenly 
noticed a bus coming behind me. The bus obstructed me and one of the 
occupants came out, pointed a gun at me and shouted that I should park. 
He threatened to shoot if I didn’t park.
 “When I discovered that 
they were police¬men, I tried to explain to them that I wanted to park 
my car so that I could enter the shop. The incident happened at Pako bus
 stop along Ojo road where there were so many tankers and lorries parked
 indiscriminately.
 “I begged the one that was wearing a black 
T-shirt to allow me to go, as I was pregnant. Then, he called me a 
prostitute. I was angry and reminded him that I am a mar¬ried woman with
 two kids. I warned him not to call me a prostitute again. But the 
police¬man dragged me down from the car, even as passers-by and my 
friend were begging him to let me go.
 “While I was screaming for 
help, saying, ‘I am not a thief,’ they tore my trousers. I was not 
putting on any underwear, so they stripped me naked. They were dragging 
me, saying I must enter their vehicle, but I re-fused. They dragged me 
on the road, but I insisted that I would go with them in my car. In the 
process, my legs and my stomach were bruised,” she said.
 She said she was eventually bundled into the police vehicle and taken to the station, even in her virtually naked state.
 “On getting to the police station, I pleaded with them to allow me get a
 cloth from the shop. I was begging them so that I could meet any woman 
nearby to give me a wrap¬per because I was naked. People around were 
asking me what happened, and I replied that the policemen did that to 
me, even though I’m not a thief. Because, with the way I was treated, 
one could mistake me for a thief. I had to bite one of the policemen on 
the back.
 “I then entered one provision store near the station where
 I met a woman who gave me this gown. My phone was in my vehicle and I 
told the police officers that they should allow me call my people to 
inform them that I was at the station, but they refused. They said I 
must be put in the cell. I was run¬ning around, trying to get a phone, 
but no one would give me their phone because they thought I was a mad 
woman. They were just looking at me. I then saw a young girl, and I 
spoke to her in Igbo, telling her I was not a thief. She was the one 
that gave me her phone and I called my sister, because her number was 
the one I could easily recall. I told her what was happening, so she 
came with her husband that night and met me at the police station. They 
were asking me what happened, but her husband said we had to find those 
who assaulted me. So, we went into the police station and met the 
Divisional Crime Officer (DCO). He told us to explain what happened, but
 as I was talking, I felt dizzy and passed out,” she said.
 Police insisted she was pretending-Witness
 The victim’s sister, Favour Ifebuzor, ex¬plained that she rushed down 
to the police station as soon as she got the distress call from her 
sister.
 “When my husband and I arrived at the scene, I saw my 
younger sister sitting on a pavement, looking weak. So, we took her into
 the station to find out what happened. My sister told me that she was 
feeling weak and dizzy, but the policemen rudely told her to stand up 
and explain what happened. As she tried to explain, the man at the 
counter was saying, ‘Why don’t you have respect for an officer in 
uniform? Why did you slap a policeman?’ My sister said it was when the 
policeman forcefully held her cloth and dragged her that she did that, 
because it’s lawful for one to defend oneself from dan¬ger. So, as they 
were forcefully quizzing her, I told the policeman that she was weak and
 could slump.
 “My sister was also whispering to me that she was 
feeling weak. So, she fell on the ground. And she was crying, saying ‘O 
my baby, my baby.’ Then she started foam¬ing in the mouth. The policemen
 there were saying, ‘she is pretending. Let her stay there, she is not 
serious.’ They were just watching, including the DCO. My husband was 
saying, ‘You people have killed someone’s wife and mother. Take her. She
 is your responsibility.’ My husband was dragging me so that we could 
go, but I told him to have patience. I said; let me get some water, 
because my sis¬ter was dying. I went to one shop and bought a sachet of 
water, came back and started pouring it on my sister’s head and body, 
but she was not responding. Instead, her tongue was coming out, foaming.
 “I was so scared because her stomach pro¬truded and her body was 
getting cold. I had to beg one man to help me look for a vehicle. When 
he got the vehicle, I told the police¬men to help me put her in the 
vehicle, but they were just looking at me. I was confused. The driver of
 the vehicle and the man that went to get him were the ones that helped 
me put her in the car. The biscuits I bought for my children and my 
phone, I didn’t even know where I kept them. It was when they put her in
 the vehicle that I remembered that my phone was on the counter at the 
station, and I went to the counter and picked my phone.
 “I then told
 the policemen that I was taking her to the hospital, and that if 
anything happened to her, I would hold them respon¬sible. The vehicle 
had already left. They took her to Safe Hands Hospital, and my husband 
and I walked to the hospital. When we got there, the doctor told us she 
was going into labour, and that we needed to move her to the General 
Hospital. I was confused. Then I called my sister who also came with her
 husband. But we heard the policeman who had come there telling the 
doctor that she was okay. The policeman told the doctor: ‘She’s okay 
now. You will write everything that she is okay, and that nobody beat 
her.’ So, the doctor certified her okay, and that she was not in labour again, that he had put everything in order. But this 
morning, she went into labour again,” Favour told our reporters.
 Doctor’s goof
 At the hospital, the doctor on duty, Okoawo Innocent, who spoke on 
behalf of the management, admitted that Chika was rushed into the 
hospital half conscious. He said all necessary tests were carried out, 
noting that the results showed that the baby was intact. He, however, 
said that the victim would be kept under observation.
 Saturday Sun 
gathered that Safe Hands hospital was one of the best in the area but in
 an attempt to please the policemen who were battling to prove that 
Chika was actu¬ally pretending to be in labour, they corroborated their
 claim.
 The doctor on duty despite the bruises and the fact that 
Chika was brought into the hos¬pital unconscious, said that she was 
perfectly okay. He even suggested that Chika should be released to her 
family to go home.
 Battle to save Chika and baby’s life
 But the 
doctor’s assertion was proved wrong, as Chika soon after started 
bleed¬ing. As a result, the doctor on duty became confused and requested
 that another scan be conducted. He was shocked to discover that the 
placenta had been detached from the baby and Chika was bleeding heavily 
inside. To save her life and that of the baby, she was wheeled into the 
theatre where the baby was forced out of her.
 The Satellite police 
station DPO was alerted that the story had changed. It dawned on him and
 some senior officers that Chika’s story could be true as the officers 
involved in the assault had sworn that they did not raise a finger 
against her. The officers involved who were seen going about their 
normal duty were immediately arrested and detained.
 Realising that 
it was not business as usual, policemen were mobilized to ensure that 
the ever busy Badagry expressway was cleared to ensure free access to 
Outreach medical hospital where the premature baby could be put in an 
incubator. The little one who was already weak as a result of the delay 
died less than 48 hours after.
 Chika’s relative told Saturday Sun 
that at about 4am on Thursday, Chika called insist¬ing that they should 
go and check her baby. “I told her that it was too early but she kept 
insisting that I must move over to the hospi-tal that something is 
wrong. It was then that my phone rang again and it was the doctor. She 
told me that the baby had just passed on. It is rather unfortunate,” she
 said.
 On getting to the hospital, senior officers, including the 
Satellite DPO, were seen leav¬ing after sighting the dead baby and 
consol¬ing the family. He was said to have been sup¬portive and promised
 that the suspects would be prosecuted accordingly. He was said to have 
pleaded with the family members that the police would pay the bill 
incurred by the family.
 On the cause of death, Dr Efunbu Dosekun of 
Outreach Hospital, who spoke with Satur¬day Sun, explained that the baby
 had breath¬ing problem which they battled all through the night to 
control. “It is rare for a prema¬ture baby to survive because there must
 have been a problem that led to the child being born earlier. When he 
was rushed in to our hospital, we did all we could to save his life.
 “The best thing is for the family to go for an autopsy to have a clear 
understanding of what really happened. Chika’s placenta de¬tached from 
the baby and the unborn child was breathing on its own inside his 
mother’s womb. We thank God that Chika did not bleed to death before the
 doctors on duty discovered that”, she stated.
 She advised that proper medical check-up should be done on Chika to correct the dam¬age that could have been done.
 Take me to my son, Chika insists
 Back to Safe Hands Hospital where Chika looked well and happy. She told
 her sisters that she wanted to be relocated to the hospi¬tal where her 
baby was. “Take me to my son. I need to see my son. Police did not 
succeed in taking him away from me. I am so happy. I will take him 
abroad to see his father”, she stood up pacing around frantically trying
 to pick her bags.
 As at press time, she had, however, been informed
 of the death of her baby and trans¬ferred to another hospital for 
proper medical examination. “She has not stopped crying. Our major 
concern at the moment is how to save her life. We had to transfer her to
 anoth¬er hospital that is not under the jurisdiction of Satellite 
police station. It appears that the doctors are afraid of the police, 
that is why they lied. If our sister did not start bleed¬ing from her 
virgina, she would have bled to death. We thank God for her life,” one 
of the relatives who spoke to Saturday Sun on phone said.
 They will be prosecuted if found culpable –Police
 Confirming the incident, Lagos State Po¬lice Command spokesman, Kenneth
 Nwosu, a deputy superintendent of police (DSP), as¬sured that 
investigation was ongoing to as¬certain what actually transpired. He 
said the suspected policemen had been arrested and were in detention, 
adding that they would be prosecuted according to the law guiding the 
force.
 “The Nigerian police has a procedure which will be followed in ensuring that the suspects will be disciplined”, he added. 
 
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