The special Adviser on
Media and Publicity to former President Goodluck Jonathan spoke on the issue of
sugarbelly’s rape allegation. If you
missed the story read here
I don’t know Sugarbelly, but
it is the twitter handle of a Nigerian lady: @sugabelly, who in the wake of the
death of former Governor Abubakar Audu of Kogi State felt the urge to go public
with her story. My foregrounding her/story as opposed to his/story, is further
affirmation of an earlier submission that Audu’s death is “inconclusive” (The
Guardian, Nov 27).
As the rest of Nigeria
mourned the death of Abubakar Audu and pondered the implications of an
inconclusive electoral process, Sugabelly showed up on social media and started
celebrating his death. Her message was that the death of the man was good
riddance to bad rubbish. “I feel so amazing”, she wrote. “Like God actually
answered my prayers… That’s usually how it is. Powerful people rarely remember
the people whose lives they destroy.” She alleged that Audu’s sons once
gang-raped her- seven of them, when she was an impressionable 17-year old and
that Governor Audu used his position as a big man to rubbish her, slammed her
with a $2 million libel suit, denied her from getting justice, with his lawyers
insisting that “14 years” is the age of consent under the Penal Code in the
FCT, and so there is no case. For eight years, her life, she says, has been a
nightmare including contemplations of suicide and spells of manic depression.
Her frustration is well
articulated in her twitter handle and an extended commentary titled “Surviving
Mustapha Audu and His Rape Brigade”
I have heard people
proclaim loudly that a traditional proverb says: “the witch cried last night
and the child died in the morning” and they have been wondering whether there
was some kind of extra-terrestial, meta-physical animus which led to Audu’s sudden
death. Howbeit, Sugabelly’s allegation is that of rape. Her protestation made
the rounds for a few days largely uncelebrated, but it caught fire last Friday.
For days, rape was the subject of discussion on Nigerian twitter. Opinion was
divided with some calling Sugabelly, “a whore” and a badly brought up child but
soon, the weight tilted heavily in her favour as the reactions panned out to
focus on the menace of rape and the devastating effect on persons, families,
the victims and society.
One of the sons of Abubakar
Audu was soon fingered as the leader of the rape brigade -by both Sugabelly and
her staunchest supporter, @Echecrates. What happened subsequently is better
experienced. A lady tweeting as Zahra - @oakleafbycg - jumped into the fray to
defend him - hers was quite a spirited fight that lasted for hours, defending
the integrity of her husband. She probably was defending herself too. Her
father-in-law was so close to being Governor and he lost it, only for some
twitter activists, and a sugabelly (what a name!, by the way) to start
suggesting that her husband has a rape case to answer. She is a good woman,
isn’t she? I monitored the conversations, and it is difficult to conclude that
anyone was successfully convicted for there were persons who raised questions
about sugabelly’s identity, her motives and whether she is not just a spoiler,
playing a sponsored political game.
The emergent consensus
however focused on the menace of rape in our society. Some male commentators
seeking to genderize the discussion also pointed out that they were once raped
too, but the pervasive impression was that young girls are more often the
victims. I noted that there was very little talk about marital rape, which is
ordinarily a major issue in the West, but which will be considered absurd by
Africans. There were some suggestions about rapists being put to death in line
with the still untested Violence Against Persons Act, but as is the case with
twitter, 140-word interventions do not necessarily a honest thinker nor an
intellectual make. It creates an illusion though, the illusion that someone
whose reasoning is below 140 words is a mega-man of knowledge and insights.
Nonetheless, the matter
between sugabelly and the Audu sons deserves a little more probing. I am tempted
to commend sugabelly for throwing up the subject, but the real problem with
rape in our society lies in the inadequacy of both legal and social responses.
Both the law and the society stigmatise rape, and wrong-foot the victim. The
relevant sections of the law in Nigeria today more or less ridicule the victim,
and usually, the victim is female. The biggest challenge for decades has been
this manner in which the law humiliates the female victim: the procedure
requires examination by a medical doctor and in open court, proving actual
penetration up to the labia majora. That is a tough call for victims and
families, and so, many cases end up unreported. Besides, the criminal justice
system peopled by phallocentric officials is wont to dismiss any woman reporting
rape: in Nigeria, it would be ridiculous indeed for a married woman or a
girlfriend to report being raped by her husband or fiancée. From the policeman
at the station to the presiding judge, if it gets to that stage, the case may
die a natural death in the vortex of misogyny.
Culture is a major barrier:
the search for virgins at the bridal chamber by African families is a long dead
custom, but few families can stand the stigma of taking as wife, a woman who
has been raped, and whose indignity has been broadcast. Female victims are therefore reluctant to
seek legal redress, first because of social stigma, and that is why there are
very few convictions despite the regular incidence of rape. Any woman that is
labeled a rape victim stands the risk of not getting a husband: families of
prospective suitors will latch on to that evidence as if it a mark of leprosy,
and urge their sons to steer clear, creating for the woman’s family an
undeserved dilemma. Despite the wave of modernity in our land, tradition
remains resilient and marriage, going to a man’s house, is still, quite sadly,
considered a woman’s ultimate achievement.
This is probably why, in
due course, the accused also showed up in the conversation releasing e-mail
exchanges between him and Sugabelly, and going as far as revealing her true
identity and painting her as a “whore,” a liar and an opportunist. Parents,
keep an eye on your sons and daughters!
The family, the most important social unit, has a role to play. Both male and female children should be
brought up to respect ethical values and the rights of other human beings to
dignity. The inferiorization of the female gender often begins in the home, and
there are too many cultural paradigms sustaining an objectionable model of parenting,
which must change. Too many parents, too busy trying to make survival possible,
have abdicated responsibility and it is society that is hurt as a result.
The solution also lies in
legal reform: the laws on rape must become more progressive and enlightened.
The statutes have been in urgent need of review for long; they must provide the
necessary deterrence and not ridicule the victim; even the Violence Against
Persons Act (2015) does not fully correct the mischief in the Criminal and
Penal Codes.
There is also a trend now
that must be addressed, namely the objectification of women for profit or other
purposes. The most recent illustration I find is the battle being waged on
twitter and instagram by @blossomnnodim, who has since changed to @blossomozurumba
(good luck to the man who is responsible for this blossoming), as she takes on
a TBWA power charger advert, which instead of promoting the subject focuses on
a woman’s biological gifts. Blossom objects to this but she has since been accused
of witch-hunting and idleness. Her critics miss the point. The objectification
of women in popular culture erodes the dignity of women. But the worse of it
all, is that women themselves promote this negative effect. Nigeria has been
lucky in locking into global trends on all fronts, but in a global village, we
have not been successful in retaining local standards as a bulwark against
negative, imperial cultural influences.
Social media, for example,
is dominated by images of sexual libertinism; even our young ladies who are now
role models on the basis of concrete accomplishments help to foster this image.
I am making this point delicately; my concern is that we have too many Nigerian
female role models who are busy trying to be like Amber Rose, Nicki Minaj,
Rihanna, Kim Kardashian, Kylie Jenner, Rita Ora, Miles Cyrus, Blac Chyna – if
you know what I mean, all those foreign cultural icons whose lifestyles
commodify women. Our own equivalents are all over social media: pretty girls
who are perpetually showing cleavages, wearing body tights that accentuate
curves, some even boast that they won’t wear bras and pants and that illicit
sex is cool: that is how this self-denigration has grown all the way down,
creating a sexual tension even among the uneducated wannabes. I am not victimizing the victim, knowing
fully well that there is that human rights border of freedom of choice and
expression; still, new cultural realities should command certain limits.
Sugabelly may not get the
sugar of contentment that she seeks, but let her be consoled that she has
ignited a debate that may shed more light on the dilemma of rape, and/or sex
with a minor (Penal Code or not), and the sad manner in which our society
continues to produce children and adults who behave badly. Let us also hope
that sooner or later, the sleeping Abubakar Audu will be allowed to lie, by his
sons and the girl they allegedly raped. It is not Audu that is on trial, it is
his sons: sons of big men who go overboard with their life of privilege, and of
course, Sugabelly- the overtly impressionable young girl- who are all still
alive to be called to account, if not in regular court, but now, in the court
of public opinion.
Sugarbelly. Don't Worry Again. There Is GoD. Sit up & Move Forward. There Time Is Gone Pray it is ur Time.
ReplyDeleteSugarbelly can marry outside Nigeria when she's ready, she did not have to marry a Nigerian if people want to hold on to stigma.Her courage to speak is to be commended.
ReplyDelete