Mary
Agbo, 28 has waited for over a month for the first signs of justice for
an wrong she says no woman should ever have to face violence against
women in the workplace.
On
August 1, 2012, Agbo began her NYSC primary duty with the Garki
Gazette, an Abuja-based weekly lifestyle and events publication, located
within the premises of Eddy-Vic Hotels on Ahmadu Bello Way, Garki II,
Abuja. By August 17, Emmanuel Abanah, the magazine’s publisher and owner
of Eddy-Vic Hotels confirmed her as the Editor of the publication
“having satisfied preliminary conditions for the job”, he wrote in her
letter of engagement.
But
on November 1, she filed a complaint at the Garki Police station
against Abanah, 35, for allegedly assaulting her after she requested a
Performance Certificate, the necessary documentation corps members must
obtain from their employers monthly, and mandatorily submit to the NYSC
to be entitled to their government allowance. She reported the assault
to the NYSC on the same day and asked to be reposted from Garki Gazette
citing fear for her life and an unsafe work conditions.
“He
slapped me and pushed me, I hit my ear hard on an iron fence by his
garden. He started dragging my top (white NYSC vest) and my breast came
out,” Agbo told the Police. “He brought out his hand again and slapped
me. He called his manager and assistant to send me out of the premises
which they did”.
Agbo
explained the events of November 1. In the morning while attending her
Community Development group meeting, she was advised to submit her PC
the same day as NYSC officials would be busy with the new batch of corps
members resuming the following week. Back at the office which was
locked, both Ada, Abanah’s assistant, and Sharks, the magazine’s
production manager advised she call the publisher. After several
unanswered calls and an SMS, Abanah alighted from his hotel room rude
and shouting at her for disturbing him. As she tried explaining herself,
he began beating her in anger, Agbo said.
A
medical report from the Asokoro General Hospital signed by Dr. C.N
Okoli stated Agbo “presented with generalized body pain, headache,
earache, dizziness, and tinge of blood in the right eye”.
The
Garki Police went to Abanah’s office that same day, but met his
absence. It however became clear he had gone into hiding after he failed
to turn up following several other visits to his office and calls
inviting him to the station. A warrant for his arrest was subsequently
obtained.
Two
reasons are at the root of the assault, Agbo says. She had severally
asked Abanah to pay her salary and that of the magazine’s contributing
journalists being owed months in arrears. This displeased him
tremendously. Also, her refusal to concede to her employer’s sexual
advances irked him further, she said.
The
NYSC at a zonal level launched an investigation. A source within the
NYSC who asked not to be named provided the internal report with the
findings from the investigation. Though Abanah had refused to see the
investigating officer, staff of Garki Gazette and Eddy-Vic Hotels
confided “he [Abanah] has been treating them the same that he pays them
salary whenever he feels like and they do not have the right to ask
him”.
“Based
on the information about this man, shows that he is a very
irresponsible man,” The NYSC investigating officer reported. “I advise
that the corper should be withdrawn from serving in this establishment
and be reposted, and all possible measures should be taken to make him
for his reactions. He has no right to treat her this way.”
Abanah
on his own then petitioned the NYSC State Coordinator on November 12
accusing Agbo in a four-page letter of “poor parental upbringing” and
being “desperate, devious, and dubious and a calculated and cold liar
that thinks everybody wants to flirt with her”. He added he has no
regards for the Garki Police station and was therefore taking his case
against Agbo to the Commissioner of Police of the Federal Capital
Territory.
“The
publisher did not want a heehaw affair with a desperate woman whom he
has been feeding in a local police station,” Abanah said.
“Miss
Agbo has been given a fair option of proceeding to a court of law with
her claims, but will not be granted the excessiveness of a shouting
match with her employer at a local police station.”
Abanah
in a calculated move petitioned the Commissioner of Police of the
Federal Capital Territory. But contrary to what he told the NYSC, he
claimed Agbo was using police officers from the Garki Police station to
threaten him. He asked the case be transferred to the FCT Police
command, apparently to avoid being charged to court. On November 30,
Agbo was invited as an accused to make her report. She was detained and
only released after her sister stood bail for her.
By
December 3, when the FCT Police Command was presented with Abanah’s
subsisting arrest warrant from the Garki Police station, and it was also
discovered the contradicting motives Abanah had declared in his letters
to the Police, and the NYSC for refusing to honour the Police
invitation, he was arrested with the Garki Police Station taking him
into their custody.
Speaking
to Abanah while in detention behind the Police counter, he said a
recent case of murder in his hotel involving an alleged prostitute in
October and his unwillingness to continually bribe officers of the Garki
Police station led him to refuse to honour their respective
invitations. Abanah denied assaulting Agbo, but claimed she was out to
tarnish his image. He described Agbo as erratic and unproductive who for
three weeks failed to come to work for no apparent reason only to
resurface asking him to sign her NYSC Performance Certificate.
Abanah’s
staff when questioned separately however debunked his claims, instead
stating Abanah had failed to provide a conducive work space for them. A
visit to Garki Gazette premises revealed the only furnished office is
Abanah’s office, which doubles as his office as Eddy-Vic Hotels managing
director, located on the ground floor of the hotel facing the main
entrance. Another space for staff remains under construction.
To
further puncture his claims, Agbo, the former sub-editor of the Charly
Boy magazine, provided evidence of the eight editions she oversaw as
editor of the Garki Gazette, with her by-line and image featured on the
editorial page.
Agbo
also accuses Abanah of plagiarism. Despite not giving her a termination
letter, he removed her by-line from the magazine’s 54th issue which was
her ninth edition which she said she wrote 16 out of 32 pages and
edited before its publication 3rd-9th November 2012. A copy of the said
publication reveals Abanah replaced Agbo’s name as editor with Kaila
Budango, his pen name. He removed Agbo’s image from the editorial page,
but published her remarks “word for word”, passing it off as his own,
she said.
Late
in the evening of December 3, the Police in Garki ushered a visibly
humbled Abanah into a police cell after asking him to undress and
declare all his belongings on him. He spent the night and was charged to
court on December 4th 2012 for resisting Police arrest.
Abanah’s
friends, since his arrest, have been pleading with Agbo and her family
to let peace reign and withdraw her case currently with the FCT Police
Command. Agbo said she has to consult with her lawyer and rights groups
which took up her case before taking a decision. She however underscored
conditions Abanah must meet.
“One
he has to write back to NYSC to retract the lies he wrote about me.
Two, he has to write an undertaking nothing will happen to me because he
knows where I live,” Agbo said. “And since my contract is not
terminated, he must pay my arrears and that of other staff he owes their
salary.”
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