Chidi Odinkalu, former
Chairman of the National Human Rights Commission NHRC, has said that the Senior
Pastor of the Commonwealth of Zion Assembly COZA, Chidi Odinkalu, might have
won in the rape case filed against him by Busola Dakolo at the Abuja High Court
but his name is in ruins and he might never be able to clear the rape
allegation leveled against him by Mrs Dakolo.
Chidi Odinkalu shared his opinion in a new
artilce he wrote titled ''Busola Dakolo: In Praise of Soft Vengeance''. Read
the full article below
At the end of June
2019, #MeToo became #ChurchToo in Nigeria.
Busola Dakolo, a
mother of three who grew up a gifted child was the unlikely heroine in this
script. She first laid bare her claims in an interview with Chude Jideonwo,
lawyer and co-founder of the digital platform, YNaija. These claims later
became the basis for her civil claim filed at the Abuja High Court on September
6, detailing harrowing allegations of rape perpetrated against her by Pastor
Biodun Fatoyinbo, best known as the senior pastor of the Commonwealth of Zion
Assembly (COZA). The acts took place on 23 and 26 September 2002.
To be clear, this was
not the first time allegations of sexual predation had been made against this
pastor. Mrs. Dakolo’s allegations, however, felt different. They were detailed;
as a married mother, she had very little to gain from making these allegations
public and an awful blowback was both predictable and to be expected from
partisans and propagandists of the alleged perpetrator.
The first incident of
sexual assault allegedly took place when she was 17 in her parents’ house in
Ilorin, Kwara State. Neither parent was at home and the pastor knew this. She
had never experienced sexual intimacy before then. She looked up to the pastor
as her “Spiritual Father”. The facts would suggest that the alleged perpetrator
probably groomed her for this moment. After the sexual act, he reportedly gave
her a bottle of “Krest”, a lemonade-flavoured soda and forced her to drink it.
There was a second incident which reportedly took place in or on a car. As a
young Christian girl from a polygamous home, Busola Amupitan, as she was when
these sexual assaults reportedly took place, initially was unable to confide in
anyone about these crimes.
Expectedly, these
allegations set off a firestorm across Nigeria and beyond. The alleged
perpetrator initially issued a statement offering a general denial of the
allegations and threatening both civil and criminal proceedings. For the first
time, Pastor Fatoyinbo found himself issuing a public response to such
allegations. In the past, he had not dignified similar allegations with an
acknowledgement. Pastor Fatoyinbo’s threat of criminal proceedings sounded like
bluster. He did not have a plausible path to criminal proceedings against her.
In the end, Mrs. Dakolo sued before the civil
courts. A mere nine weeks after her case was filed, Justice A.O. Musa, sitting
on the outskirts of Abuja in Bwari, delivered a ruling on the outskirts of the
jurisprudential season, holding on November 14 that it was statute-barred.
Under the applicable laws, he ruled, such cases must be filed not later than 75
months (six years and three months) after the act complained of. Having
dismissed Mrs. Dakolo’s action, the judge then added: “…what we are now left
with in this suit is sentiment. This suit is soaked in emotions and ferried
into this court by the claimant riding on the thick clouds of bourgeoning
sentiments”, claiming that it will “occasion grave miscarriage of justice” to
ask the pastor to answer to these claims after 16 years.
This ruling raises
many questions about the state of both law and procedure concerning sexual
assaults in Nigeria, especially, one reported so many years after it happened.
As the world marks the International day for the Elimination of Violence
Against Women, it is important to return to these.
Criminal proceedings,
if one were to take place, become a trial, not of the alleged perpetrator, but
an ordeal for the victim, in which her intimate life is subjected to
humiliating micro-examination for the purpose of granting the perpetrator a
free pass.
In principle, there is
no limitation on criminal prosecution for rape or sexual violence. The fact
that the allegations in this case happened long ago does not preclude an
investigation or, if evidence of rape is in fact unearthed, of prosecution.
Achieving such an outcome, however, would be dependent on overcoming some
constraints of law, evidence and practice.
Let’s begin with the
broad regime of laws affecting rape and sexual violence in Nigeria. At present,
Nigeria has a multiplicity of sources of laws on rape and sexual violence.
There are at least five. In the Federal Capital Territory, the Violence Against
Persons (Prohibition) Act (VAPPA) of 2015 has a robust definition of rape as a
crime that can be committed by both men and women and involves penetration of
any bodily orifice. Nine states – Anambra, Benue, Ebonyi, Edo, Ekiti, Enugu,
Kaduna, Osun, and Oyo – seven in the south and only two in the north – have
adopted the VAPPA. In nine other states of Southern Nigeria, the Criminal Code
applies. Separately, Lagos State enacted a Criminal Law in 2011, which defined
rape in terms that both anticipated and resemble the VAPPA. 12 States of
Northern Nigeria that have adopted Sharia also recognise a Huddud crime of
rape. Additionally, the Penal Code remains applicable in 17 States of the north
in relation to the crime of rape.
Both the Criminal and
Penal Codes are Victorian pieces of legislation, the gist of whose
prescriptions on sexual violence were defined in the last quarter of the 19th
century during the reign of Queen Victoria. By the way, she died in 1901. In
the terms alleged, the crimes against Mrs. Dakolo took place in Kwara State,
where the Penal Code is applicable.
Section 282 of the
Penal Code defines the crime of rape as comprising four essential elements:
(a) penetration of
female genitals with the male phallus;
(b) the act of
penetration achieved without the consent of the woman or the consent – if one
is alleged – was obtained by fraud, force, threat, intimidation, deceit or
impersonation;
(c) the woman is not
the wife of the perpetrator; and
(d) the perpetrator
intended to achieve penetration of the woman without her consent or acted
recklessly without regard to whether or not she consented.
The two most important
of these four elements are the physical act of penetration and the
communicative act of lack of consent. Every investigation of rape invariably
turns on these, making rape a trial of the body of the woman or victim.
Rape typically occurs
outside public view. Overcome invariably by personal feelings of guilt and
filth, victims are often too ashamed in the immediate aftermath of the crime to
confide in anyone. As a result, rape kits are often not performed until after
loss of biological evidence. By the time a rape kit is performed, essential
biological evidence would have been lost, making the likelihood of effective
investigation or successful prosecution rather low or non-existent. Criminal
proceedings, if one were to take place, become a trial, not of the alleged
perpetrator, but an ordeal for the victim, in which her intimate life is
subjected to humiliating micro-examination for the purpose of granting the
perpetrator a free pass. Unsurprisingly, many victims, unwilling to subject
themselves to such ordeals, would rather nurse their violations and not report
rape.
This is the context
for assessing the ruling dismissing Mrs. Dakolo’s civil case. The victim was
too young at the time of the alleged incident. The judge, having held the case
was statute–barred, went on to venture gratuitous put downs that did not do him
a lot of credit. He rendered judgment with neither compassion nor humaneness
and was too enthusiastic to lay into the victim. The award of punitive costs
against her counsel (in the sum of one million naira) appeared rather uncalled
for at best.
…the definition of
rape in both the Criminal and Penal Codes is clearly very outdated. It makes
the crime near impossible to prove. To achieve this, VAPP Act needs to be taken
to all the States and made the standard all over Nigeria. This will make it
possible to harmonise the laws of sexual offences across the country…
Whatever the
difficulties of proof, cases like Mrs. Dakolo’s remind us of the need to scale
up rape law reform in Nigeria. Some basic steps can help.
First, the definition
of rape in both the Criminal and Penal Codes is clearly very outdated. It makes
the crime near impossible to prove. To achieve this, VAPP Act needs to be taken
to all the States and made the standard all over Nigeria. This will make it possible
to harmonise the laws of sexual offences across the country, eliminating the
confusion that presently exists. The Conference of Attorneys-General in concert
with the inspector-general of Police can commit to legislating to make this
possible.
Second, at present,
the law allows evidence of the sexual or intimate histories of victims from the
proceedings but mostly precludes such evidence on the part of alleged
perpetrators. This incidence of the laws of evidence in rape proceedings in
most jurisdictions in Nigeria can be reversed by amending the relevant laws in
all the states other than Lagos where this has already been achieved.
Third, in civil cases
alleging the rape of minors – as in persons under the age of 18 – or
culpability of persons in authority over the victim (as in a pastor), it should
be possible to allow for a doctrine of continuing violation triggering the
commencement of computation for limitation purposes from either the attainment
of majority or the end of the power relationship between the victim and the
perpetrator (whichever is later). If this requires updating legal doctrine or
amending the statute of limitation, then it should be done.
Fourth, predictably,
propagandists for the alleged perpetrator have gone to town with unfounded
claims of his exoneration. That, sadly, is far from what has happened. It is
impossible, however, for victims in cases such as this not to feel let down by
the system. We must invest in weaning judges through training of a prevailing
Victorian mind-set about remedying rape.
Pastor Fatoyinbo may
have achieved a technical legal victory but it has left his name in ruins. He
may never be able to clear himself of allegations that he is a rapist. That is
a terrible burden for a “Man of God” to live with, a testament to the soft
vengeance of Busola Dakolo’s incredible courage.
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