An unidentified herbalist has tortured a 26-year-old man,
Oluwasegun Ayoola so badly that he lost the use of his two hands in the Oke-Aro
area of Lagos State.
The herbalist,
who is still at large, tied the victim’s hands and feet and dumped him in a
clay pot for three days without food. The victim was said to have been released
after some family members intervened. He was subsequently taken to a hospital
for treatment.
Oluwasegun was reportedly cleaning up his apartment on Idimu
Road, Ejigbo, when he collapsed and was taken to the herbalist’s shrine by a
half-brother, Afolabi.
His mother, Mrs. Kudirat Ayoola, said she never knew they
were being taken to a shrine on the day of the incident.
She said, “My son lives in his late father’s house in
Ejigbo; I don’t stay with him. On April 30, 2016, I was called that he had
collapsed in the house. My stepson, Afolabi, and a stepdaughter told me to join
them because they were taking him for treatment. I never knew it was a
herbalist’s house they were taking us to.
“When we got to Oke-Aro, they handed us over to a herbalist.
I protested, but they said it was for the improvement of his health. They
dropped us off and left.
“On the following day, the herbalist poured palm oil around
my son with candles and some fetish items. He asked my son to kneel down while
I should be praying. He brought out a knife and a divination tablet. He said my
son had become his meat.
“We were alarmed and my son started struggling with him. I
screamed for help. They started fighting and my son headbutt the man. Some of
the herbalist’s associates came and beat up my son. They tied him up and dumped
him in a clay pot. He was there for three days.”
She added that efforts to locate a police station in the
neighbourhood to report the incident proved abortive, adding that her relatives
later came to free the victim.
Oluwasegun said the incident had left him disable, saying he
depended on his mother for almost everything.
He said, “When I left the herbalist’s place, I went to a
police station in Agege to report the incident, but the policeman I met at the
counter didn’t attend to me because my hands stank and flies were buzzing over
my injuries.
“I later saw a police patrol van, which called an ambulance.
I was given some treatment and taken back to the house. But my condition has
not improved. I depend on my mother to go to the toilet, wear my clothes and
even eat. I can’t do anything by myself.”
The Public Affairs Officer of the Office of the Public Defender,
Mr. Adeoba Adeniji-Adele, who confirmed the incident, said the agency was still
studying the case.
0 Comments