Exposed: Abuja Villages Where Twins Are Sacrificed
Crude, Cruel, Absurd, Call it any of these words and many more and you won’t be wrong. Twins are still not spared in some communities...
http://universalreporters247.blogspot.com/2013/05/exposed-abuja-villages-where-twins-are.html?m=1
Crude,
Cruel, Absurd, Call it any of these words and many more and you won’t be
wrong. Twins are still not spared in
some communities in Kwali and Abaji Local Government Areas of Abuja Federal
Capital Territory (FCT) decades after a Scottish missionary, Mary Slessor,
championed the campaign that stopped the killing of the children in Nigeria.
The story as packaged by Sunday Vanguard’s Levinus Nwabughiogu And Laide
Akinboade.
The
journey into the villages of Tunga, Gomani, Zaiha, Dongoruwa, Tubudu, Kutara,
Paiko began from Abuja-Lokoja highway. The connecting village was Dafa. And it
was here that we parked our vehicle, hired two motorbikes to continue the
journey because of the rough terrain.
The villages have a common language called Bassa just as they are united
by their cultural heritages. They believe that twin babies are a taboo and the
children desecrate the land, and must be dealt with accordingly, i.e. killed.
The people are no Christians or Muslims. They are traditionalists. There is
total lack of government presence in the communities. No road, pipe- borne
water, hospital, school. Yet the villagers vote during elections. They have
representatives in the Council Areas, House of Representatives and Senate.
Guide and interpreter
Before
Sunday Vanguard set out on the journey, arrangement had been made with a guide
who would also have been the interpreter. But it turned out that the guide
could not make it. We resorted to using motorcyclists as interpreters with the
villagers.
The
first point of call was Gomani where we met some men under a tree. They told us
there were missionaries in the villages and took us to a building, described as
a church, where we had a chat with a 60- year-old man who identified himself as
Moses. He is the pastor in charge of the church. He declared that he was posted
to the village only recently and that he was yet to know the practices of the
people. He viewed the question as to whether twins were being sacrificed in the
village with suspicion and declined to answer.
Infant mortality
Leaving
Gomani, we waded through the forest on motorbike until we were greeted by a
cluster of mud houses, signposting Tubudu village. On arrival, we met some
children playing games. Our presence interrupted their games. One of the boys
smartly greeted, “Good afternoon, sir”. We tried to establish a rapport with
the people through the boy. But our looks betrayed us as we were marked out among
them as total strangers. How to get answers to our enquiries became difficult.
We asked for the village head and chiefs but were told that they might have
left for their farms.
Shrines
In
a manner that tended to depict “it -is –our- culture- and- therefore -we- will-
show it off”, the villagers built shrines that dotted everywhere. In every
compound, there was a shrine strategically carved on the wall of a barn, simply
announcing that twins had been sacrificed there. Our enquiries produced one
resident who claimed not to have been an indigene but had lived in the village
for five years. He spoke Hausa and English Languages. The man subjected us to a
barrage of questions trying to ascertain our identities and mission. By the
time he became convinced, he agreed to talk to us on the condition of
anonymity. He was one of the missionaries there on rescue mission. He said his
mission was to fight infant mortality. When we shared our experience with him,
he said, “If you are a stranger, they will not tell you that they kill twins in
the village but if you live among them, they tell you. Bassa people kill
twins.”
Taboo
Our
source began his story: “I work for Christian Missionary Foundation in the
North Central of Nigeria., I am here because I was posted here and our aim is
to reach out to the unreached in Abuja. I have been here for the past five
years. My mission here is to stem infant mortality. In this village, they
believe a woman is not supposed to give birth to more than a child; so they
kill one of the children at birth if they are twins and leave the other because
twins are a taboo to them.
They
also kill single babies if, at the point of birth, the mother dies. Initially
they were not giving us the children, but a woman with a strong heart for her
children would come to us and say, ‘I cannot accept this, I don’t believe this
child is a witch’. So, some of them bring the children to us. When a woman
brings her child to you at the point of death, you won’t be able to say no. You
see innocent child about to be killed, you won’t be able to say no. Some of
them bring their children to us and say, ‘look they want to sacrifice these
children’. We live among them. “As they
deliver twins, they don’t waste time to bring them to us because they imagine
the evil that can befall them. ”So how
do they kill these children? They poison them. You will see a child is eating
but terribly ill, they use spiritual means to poison the child. Sometimes the
child dies instantly. It is a spiritual thing, you see a woman gives birth and
within seconds the child dies.
The Shrine…
“Few
months ago, one incident here. There was a woman who had lost four
children. It turned out that it was her
own brother who the one was bewitching her. Spiritual things are things you
don’t see with naked eyes. The husband went to a herbalist to promise him that
if the baby she was carrying didn’t die, he would give him something. But when the woman gave birth the baby died
within three hours.
![]() |
| The Shrine |
Practice not strictly
religious
“The
villagers are traditional worshippers, they worship the spirit of the dead,
river and trees. Though we have Muslims and Christians among them, they still
go back to their traditional practice. So, it is like they practice their
religions and hold their culture passionately.
And they initiate their children into it also; so, as the older ones
die, the younger ones continue. So, what
we do is to help the children.”
Asked
whether it is everybody in the community that practices traditional religion,
he said: “Some of them that are enlightened are against it and, even then when
they are not enlightened, the women are against it. But what can they do? The leadership and most of the people are
involved. It is their culture and they hold it tenaciously.”
Rescue mission
According
to him, some of the village women are excited about his foundation rescuing the
children. “They come around to see their children living fine. Some of the
children have even started school. As they pass out of school, they would be
taken back to the villages to proclaim the gospel. Initially, people outside
the villages were coming to us for adoption of these children but we refused,
they have been saved to serve. Initially
some of the villagers were proud of the culture but when they discovered that
it wasn’t good they tried to do away with it. Some of them have come to give
their lives to God. Some of them are happy with us, “he added.
“But
some of the village women are still ashamed to see the children, maybe because
of their positions in the community. So, they don’t come to see the children; even
when they come in secret and tell you they want this baby to be rescued. Some
of them might not be happy for rescuing the children. Because Basa people are
proud people and they are proud of their culture but with the help of
enlightenment and gospel, some of them want to do away with it. About three years ago in Kutara, a woman gave
birth to twins, both girls. They called me and I told them that if they
poisoned the babies, the foundation would take them to court. So we left the
village but I kept on monitoring the babies.
When I went back few weeks later, the girls were okay. The twin girls
are doing wonderfully well. If I hadn’t threatened them they would have
poisoned the twins as they usually do in their culture.
Building a home
“The
foundation has been rescuing children for the past 16 years ago. Initially we
were not rescuing the children, because in the vision of the ministry, the
mandate was not there. But when you see a problem and the Lord gives you
solution then and life is involved and lives are being taken everyday, what do
you do about it? So, our Directors
decided that these babies must be rescued. Right now it is one of our core
focuses in this work.
In
the home, we have about 42 children, some of them are twins. Five of the
children were rescued from this village.
The oldest of the children is about 16 years and the youngest is months
old. Culture in these villages is not a
tenable reason for getting rid of them.”
Government presence
On
government presence, he said, “We really don’t have government presence in the
village. “There is a group, Greenfield Mission, that wanted to build primary
school but they didn’t come on time. The local government came and built the
school. I was teaching in the school. For teachers to come from Kwali is really
difficult especially during raining season as the whole place is flooded,” he
stated.
“There
is no clinic around here. There used to
be one close to EYN but the building is bad. If there is any medical emergency
the villagers are left on their own or they use traditional medicine and make
sacrifices. But now there are two doctors that volunteered and come every
Monday to administer drugs.”
Source:
Vanguard


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