The suspect, Adaeze Mba, who was arrested for conniving with her husband to sell their neighbour’s four-year-old son for N400, 000, said it was poverty that pushed them to crime.
She confessed that
she and her husband, Chibueze, had sold two other children for N700, 000.
She said, “In March
2013, my neighbour’s son, Stanley Ezeaka, was following me about in the
compound at Jakande Estate and it was at that time that my husband received a
phone call from his partner that she needed a child for sale. My husband then
suggested that we took Stanley even though he was a bit old.
“We travelled to Imo
State the following morning and sold him for N400, 000 after which we relocated
to Calabar.”
When asked why she
took to crime and how she would feel if someone bought her own children, she
said, “I am seven months pregnant and as I speak to you, my husband has already
sold our unborn baby for N200, 000.
“I was against it but
he convinced me to agree to it, saying he had already collected the money.”
When asked about the
other children she and her husband had sold, she said, “The male child was sold
at N400,000 while the female child, who was two months old but is now over a
year old, was sold at N300,000.”
Chibueze on his part,
said he went into the business last year. He said he had sold ‘only’ three
children to his business partner, Benedicta Ogbonna, and maintained that the
children were in turn sold to caring parents and not ritual killers.
He said, “One of the
children was born by a mentally challenged woman; so I have committed no crime
by selling the child to people who would take care of her.”
Ogbonna, who bought
the three children from Chibueze and his wife at different times, said she sold
children to bAREEN.
She said, “I am doing
this business for humanitarian reasons and not for monetary gain. I am 35 years
old and I have four children. I can never sell my own children and in fact my
husband does not know I am into this kind of business.
“Chibueze brought
Stanley to me and told me that his mother was a prostitute so he sold him to me
at N400, 000. I then sold Stanley to Mrs. Patricia Anibogwu for N600,000. So
far, I have sold only three children. I buy boys at N400, 000 and girls at
N300,000.
“I use the money to
take care of people and also invest it in my business. I sell shoes for a
living at Anambra Wholesale Market.”
Anibogwu, who was the
final buyer, said she thought Ogbonna was an employee of an orphanage. She said
she bought Stanley because she was lonely having lost her husband.
She said amid tears
that, “I was married for 28 years without a child. After my husband died, I
decided to adopt the child because I was lonely. Someone introduced me to
Ogbonna. Ogbonna told me she worked at an orphanage and would sell Stanley to
me for N600, 000.
“I used my savings to
pay for him and she brought Stanley to a roadside. I took Stanley home and
started taking care of him like my own child. I changed his name to Uchenna.
Ogbonna promised me that she would give me legal documents later but,
unfortunately, I was arrested.”
The Police Public
Relations Officer, Ngozi Braide, urged parents to be vigilant and also advised
childless women to go through the formal process of adoption rather than buying
children.
She said, “In March
2013, one Caleb Ezeaka reported at Ilemba Hausa Police Division that his son,
Stanley, had gone missing the previous day, adding that he was last seen with
his neighbour, Adaeze Mba. All efforts to reach the neighbour proved abortive
as she and her husband had disappeared and their phones were switched off.
“Through
investigations, we traced them to Calabar and they confessed that they had sold
him at N400,000 to one Benedicta Ogbonna. We traced Ogbonna to Anambra who then
said she had sold him to Patricia Anibogwu for N600,000. So we arrested them
all.
“Adaeze and her
husband, Chibueze, confessed that they had sold three children to Ogbonna and
they were also rescued. One of the children was sold when she was three months
old and she is now a year and three months old.”
Wonders will never end, God help us.
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