The Lagos
State Government says it is currently prosecuting suspected 113 rapists
at the High Court in the state, even as Governor Babatunde Fashola
laments rising cases of rape in the state.
This was
disclosed by the Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice, Ade
Ipaye on Monday at the signing of the bill on Lagos State Infrastructure
and Asset Management into law and the Signing of Executive Order to
Establish Sex Offenders Register at the State House, Ikeja, Lagos,
southwest Nigeria.
According to Ipaye, four local
governments-Alimosho, Kosofe, Agege and Oshodi-Isolo have been
identified as the councils with the highest cases of sexual and
gender-based violence, in the state.
“We
have monitored 113 sexual violence cases currently at the High Court.
The team is working actively to ensure prompt prosecution of these
cases. The major aim of the Sex Offenders Monitoring Programme and the
Mandated Reporter policy is to reduce repeat cases by providing names
and personal details of convicted sex offenders in the state to a
central database.
“The database will be accessible to
individuals and organizations that need information. For example, school
proprietors who want to recruit can access this register as a form of
background check.
“The Mandated Reporter policy will
make it compulsory for all State School Administrators, Counsellors,
Teachers, Social Welfare Officers and any other official of the state
government having any dealings with children to report any suspected or
actual child abuse or neglect to the Attorney-General’s office,” he
said.
Ipaye added: “It is envisaged that the Lagos
State Sex Offenders Register will be open and maintained by the Lagos
State Ministry of Justice in partnership with the Lagos State Judiciary,
the Nigerian Prisons and the Nigerian Police.”
Speaking,
Fashola urged all those people in such local governments where cases of
sexual violence were on the increase to change their ways as a society
and as a community because if they do not, the state government will not
hesitate to come after them.
He also charged operators
of the private sector, especially banks, to desist from the habit of
asking women they employ to go and bring deposits that are impossible to
come by in order to keep their jobs.
“This is the time
when women must rise up and say no to those kinds of jobs. If they
would not send men on that type of mission, then you must not go. Some
of them are mission impossible targets and so that is where
vulnerability comes. Why give a woman a big job where she has to put her
dignity on the line in order to do it?” he asked.
He
maintained that for him, the laws of the states would not mature in the
fullest sense without the enforcement capacity and that this is the time
when Nigeria must have local and state policing under the control of the territory in which the offence is taking place to deal with.
According
to the Governor, if the only reason why the nation embraces state
police is to protect the women and children, then it is for a very good
reason.
He tasked the electorate to use their votes to get what they want from the parliamentarians.
He
said now is the time for the voters, especially the women, to extract
the commitment from their parliamentarians that they would support a
police formation that helps to protect their rights.

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