A pastor at the Divine Yard Deliverance Ministry in Iyana
Iyesi, Ota, Ogun State, Peace Udoh, has been arrested by the police for
allegedly running a baby factory in the church.The 47-year-old was said to have
sold 64 babies before she was arrested on Sunday by operatives from the Lagos
State Police Command who acted on a tip-off.
Udoh was apprehended with one Angela Akpan and a nurse, Mrs.
Bukola Ajala, who reportedly assisted in childbirth at Udoh’s church. PUNCH
Metro learnt that the pastor usually referred complicated cases to the nurse,
whose clinic, El Shaddai Hospital, is located a few metres away from the
church.Our correspondent gathered that Angela’s younger sister, 17-year-old
Goodnews Akpan, recently gave birth to a child at the clinic.
Angela, who was arrested on Saturday in the Sango area, was
said to have led police operatives on Sunday to Udoh’s church and Ajala’s
clinic, where they were picked up respectively.While parading the suspects on
Monday at the Lagos State Police Command headquarters in Ikeja, the
Commissioner of Police, Fatai Owoseni, said detectives swooped on the syndicate
after receiving intelligence report that Udoh needed a buyer for Goodnews’ baby.“The
suspects run a baby factory in the Sango Ota area. We are still working to get
64 other children she has sold out,” the CP added.
However, the pastor, who hails from Akwa Ibom State, refuted
the allegation, saying she used the church as a maternity home to assist her
pregnant church members for a token.She said, “I have been a pastor for 13
years. I only assisted my church members during childbirth. I take delivery of
13 to 15 babies every year and I have handled over 60 cases so far. I don’t
sell the babies.
“Whenever I have a complicated case, I refer the patient to
the nurse and we share the money she collects for the service. Angela brought
her sister to me in July. She gave birth on November 16 at the nurse’s clinic
and she was discharged. I was surprised when the police came to arrest me
yesterday (Sunday).”Ajala, the nurse, said she collected between N15,000 and
N17,000 for each child delivery, adding that she didn’t know anything about
selling of babies.The third suspect, Angela, said, “I am from Abak in Akwa
Ibom. I took my sister from our village to the pastor when her pregnancy was
four months. She was there until she gave birth in November and I paid N17,000.
I didn’t intend to sell her child and I have never sold any child before.”
Goodnews, a secondary school dropout, told our correspondent
that she was not aware of the plan to sell her baby. She said she followed
Angela to Lagos to avoid being ridiculed in the village.“I got pregnant in the
school but none of my boyfriends was willing to take the responsibility for the
pregnancy.“My mother would not allow me stay with her so I decided to follow my
sister to Lagos,” she added.
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