AGONY OF A MOTHER: Mrs Uche and her children...yesterday.
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Where is Citizen Emeka Benjamin Uche, a Lagos factory
worker?
That was the big question
yesterday as his wife, Ruth, 34, from Abia State broke the news of his
disappearance since February. Uche, 39, fled home when
he learnt that his expectant wife was carrying a set of twins – the family’s
third. Mrs Uche was at the Lagos
State Secretariat, Alausa yesterday with her six children, pleading for help.
Not many knew what she
wanted as she stood under a tree, close to the Press Centre, carrying the
babies. Her first two sets of twins, much older, stood close to their mother,
and did not in any way seem intimidated by the sea of cameras and faces focusing
on them.
Mrs. Uche was receptive
when our reporter approached her to narrate her ordeal.
The Nation report continues:
In 2009 when she first
conceived, she was delivered of two girls – Goodness and Godnews. The second
conception, two years later, produced another two – a boy and a girl, named
John and Joyce.
But when her husband,
Emeka, learnt that the third pregnancy was another set of two he fled their
number 32, Awori Street, Agege home on the outskirt of Lagos to an undisclosed
location in Ikorodu, Lagos.
The third set of twins arrived
last month. They were named Daniel and Daniella.
Mrs. Uche said she could
no longer cope with widening needs for food, clothes, drugs and school fees.
Her meagre earnings as a
teacher in a private school in Lagos can no longer meet their needs.
Her story: “I met my
husband in 2002 but we got married in 2008. We met in the village at Umuahia. I
don’t want to leave the children and run away. This is why I want government to
help us,” she said.
She recalled that she
never wanted the third pregnancy, but her use of traditional means of family
planning (counting fertile and infertile days) failed her.
“I was using traditional
way of family planning where I calculate some days before having intercourse.
It was working for me. You can see my first set of twins is four years old.
“You know as women, we
cannot deny our husband that thing whenever they request for it. Whenever I
mistakenly take in, he would say that I was pretending. Sometimes, I would go
through long process to abort the pregnancy. After that, another one would
happen. I would still have to go through the process again to abort it. When
this one happened he still insisted that I was pretending until the pregnancy
became obvious.”
“My Church was
responsible for the payment of the first delivery. The church paid N120, 000
for the delivery of the first set of twins. The two deliveries of the twins
have been through Caesarean Section for which we paid N120, 000 each. The last
twins are through normal delivery”.
Mrs. Uche explained that
her husband, a factory worker in Iju Road, Agege, has since refused to pick her
calls. She learnt that he stays in Ikorodu.
“Since I gave birth to
the children, I have tried calling my husband but he would not pick once he
knows that it is me. I contacted his mother and other relatives to tell them
that he has run away. They promised that they will call back. Since then, none
of them has called me. It is not easy for me at all.
“I know only two of his
relations. One of them lives in Ikorodu; the other one lives at Ajegunle. My
elder brother, who could have also helped, is very angry with me for giving
birth to another set of twins. He warned me before not to have any other child
after the two sets of twins, especially with the kind of husband I have.
“I cannot put my hands in
blood shedding by committing abortion. I want Nigerians to help me because
there is nobody to pay their school fees.
“I went for immunization
some days ago and I told them my condition and why they have not been seeing
me. It was there that they advised that I should come to government.Government should please help my children; no one to help me with house rent, electricity bill, school fees, food and so on,” Mrs. Uche said.
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