Based on a prediction that
his fortune would experience a leap, should he be married to a 12-year-old, a
septuagenarian is hell bent on exchanging marital vows with the pre-teen girl
despite the protestations of the mother. Olalekan Olabulo reports.
TWELVE years old Aminat
Hamisu, a Class 1 student of Ansar Ud Deen Junior Secondary School in Ado
Odo/Ota Local Government is in dire need of someone to save her life from
impending disaster. She is a subject of a forceful marriage to a man, old
enough to be her grandfather. She lost her father in the course of the
confusion that ensued over her planned marriage to a septuagenarian. Aminat is
supposed to be a Junior Secondary School 2 student but had to miss a whole
academic session as a result of the fact that she had to escape from being
forcefully engaged to a man, who should have been her guardian rather than
husband. The insistence of the old man to marry her has also resulted in her
missing classes.
Forty three years old Salamatu
Hamisu, the mother of the 12 years old girl, while speaking with the Nigerian
Tribune, appealed to well-meaning Nigerians and human rights organisations to
save her daughter from forceful marriage to a man bent on marrying the girl.
The mother of seven, while narrating the whole episode to Nigerian Tribune
stated that it all started in 2001, when a man identified as Mallam Ibraheem
Mairago, who was like a father to her insisted on marrying Aminat, who was just
11 years of age at that time.
According to her, a certain
Mallam Alli had told Mairago that he had a dream that if he could marry Aminat,
his riches would multiply. Meirago believed Mallam Alli and instantly
approached the father of Aminat, Alhaji Hamisu Aliyu, now deceased, asking for
the hand of his daughter in marriage.
“Initially my husband
refused but, when Mairago promised him some goodies, he accepted the marriage
proposal without telling either the girl or me. Mairago promised to give him a
portion at the ram market in Mile 12. He also promised to always involve him in
Quranic recitation for wealthy people in Lagos,” Salamatu narrated. She
also stated that “One day, my husband brought some yards of cloth home and said
that it was meant for my daughter. I asked him where the cloth was from and he
said that Alhaji Mairago bought it for her. I asked her for what reason and he
said he did not know. I rejected the cloth and when I prodded him further he
confessed to me that Meirago wanted to marry our daughter.”
The planned marriage led to
a clash between the household of the late Mallam Hamisu Aliyu, forcing him to
report the case to his brother in law in Sagamu. The brother in law also
initially kicked against the planned wedding but later succumbed, in a
circumstance Salamatu described as suspicious. “When I refused to support the
marriage proposal, my late husband reported me to my brother in Sagamu
and my brother also kicked against the marriage but later he took Mairago to my
brother and it was agreed that Mairago should pay N50,000 as the bride price.
At this stage, my daughter was not even aware that somebody wanted to marry
her,” the mother said. She also said that “When the situation got to a stage my
daughter was informed and she became really devastated. Because of the marriage
talk, she ran away from home for four days. On the day she ran away, I woke her
early in the morning and told her to go and pray. For more than three hours, I
did not see her and we looked around Mile 12 Market but she was nowhere to be
found. It was after four days that we saw her. The situation grew so
tense that the deceased Aliyu divorced his wife, who was then nursing a
two-month- old baby.
The woman said that she was sent away from her husband’s
house and she had to live on menial jobs in Mowe area of Ogun State. Before the death of
Aminat’s father, her suitor forced him and the mother’s brother to refund the
N50,000 naira he paid to them as the bride price. Though the father was said
not to have taken out of the money when it was paid, the brother-in-law collected
N40,000, while a certain Alhaji Manga also went away with N10,000. The refund
of the bride price, ordinarily, should have been the end of the proposed
marriage but Alhaji Meirago kept on pestering the girl’s family that he wanted
to marry the underage girl. He was accused of victimising the late Aliyu, who
was then working under him. “Before my husband died, he got to know that I had
relocated to Sango in Ogun State, where I was staying with
my cousin, Mallam Thani Bala. He even pleaded with my cousin not to allow me
return to Mowe. By this time Alhaji Mairago had married another wife for him.
My husband still loved me and he was coming to see me, even sometime he would
sleep in my cousin’s house,” the woman claimed. She further claimed that “When
Alhaji Mairago got to know that my husband was still coming to see me in my
cousin’s place, he changed to him totally. Even when they told him that my
husband was ill, he said that as long as my husband was coming to see me, he
should die.”
The death of the father of
the 12-year-old girl has, however, not changed the situation as Mallam
Mairago has turned his attention to Mallam Bala, who he accused of
habouring his wife. According to the mother, “Mairago has continued to insist
that Aminat is his wife and that he wants the police to force Thani to release
the young girl to him.” In his reaction to the issue, Alhaji Mairago, who spoke
through his lawyer, Mr. Jeleel Bashir, said that the proposed marriage was in
accordance with Islamic Law. He said that he had secured the approval of the
bride's father and paid the required bride price as stipulated by Islamic law.
The lawyer claimed that there were witnesses to the marriage between Alhaji
Mairago and Aminat, adding that the only person, who had the right to dissolve
the marriage was Alhaji Mairago himself.
On the claim by the girl's
mother that the bride price had been returned, the lawyer said that "I am
not aware that the bride price had been returned. Even if the bride price was
returned, that does not mean that the marriage has been dissolved."
According to Bashir, Islamic
law permits such marriage, even if the bride to be is not in support of the
marriage. “Islamic law allows a guardian to choose for the girl if she is
underage,” he said. He, however, said that the purpose of such marriage is not
essentially for sex but for the suitor to take care of the underage girl.
The girl, while speaking
with the Nigerian Tribune, kicked against the planned marriage. She insisted on
completing her education before thinking of marriage and added that the man was
even far older than her father. “I don’t want to marry now; I want to finish my
schooling. Alhaji’s children cannot even be my friends because they are older
than I am. I don’t want to marry Alhaji. He should leave me to complete my
education,” the 12-year-old girl said.
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