Court remands senior police officer in Kirikiri over alleged rape of teenage girl in his office

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Court remands senior
The suspect

Court remands senior police officer in Kirikiri after his family members allegedly failed to kill the case

By Jeph Ajobaju, Chief Copy Editor

A senior police officer has been ordered remanded in Kirikiri Maxium Prison over his alleged rape of a 17-year-old girl in his office at Ogudu police station in Lagos.

A Magistrate’s Court in Ogba, Lagos remanded Owolabi Akinlolu, 56,  a Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP), for allegedly raping the victim after promising to help recover her phone stolen by one-chance robbers while she was returning from Ikeja with her grandmother and siblings.

Akinlolu reportedly summoned the teenager to his office on 29 June 2024, claiming police had apprehended the suspect who stolen her phone two weeks earlier.

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But upon her arrival at the station, he allegedly locked his office door behind him and raped her.

In July 2024, the victim’s mother, Aramide Olupona, accused the police of attempting to cover up the case, disclosing that the suspect’s wife and other family members had pleaded with her to drop the charges as Akinlolu was set to retire in December 2024. Olupona did not budge.

Prosecution counsel, backed by a seven-paragraph affidavit, on Tuesday urged the court to remand Akinlolu, stressing that the offence of defilement violates Section 137 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2015.

Magistrate O.O. Fagboun ordered his remand in Kirikiri and adjourned the case until March 11 for trial.

Report shows a woman is sexually violated or killed in Nigeria every 10 minutes

A woman is sexually violated or killed in Nigeria every 10 minutes, a report by Salama Sexual Assault Referral Centre (SARC) has shown.

The study found that between 2019 and 2025, about 4,426 women, girls, and children across eight councils of Kaduna experienced one form of gender-based violence (GBV) or another.

SARC Manager for Kafanchan Zone, Grace Abim, disclosed the figures at a capacity-building session for the group in Abuja, organised by Global Rights Nigeria.

She recounted that two GBV cases were recorded in 2019 but with greater awareness, as of January 2025, the number rose to 4,426 incidents  (3,600 involving mostly women) in the zone, which covers eight councils.

According to Abim, Nigeria has a long way to go in ending GBV, even though people are beginning to speak up especially in states with Sexual and Gender-Based Violence Centres, unlike before when victims were dying in silence because there was nowhere to report abuses.

She lamented the slow pace of getting justice for victims in the country, citing  social, religious, and cultural challenges as barriers to justice dispensation.

She stressed that it is important that the offender gets punished according to law because “GBV has no respect for ages, culture, religion, tribe, profession, anyone can be a victim. However, most of the cases recorded were women and children.”

Funding is critical in addressing the menace, Abim added, but said the government cannot do it alone, hence the need for the support of private individuals.

In her view, although the Kaduna government has provided the centre with resources, the increasing number of cases requires more funding from Nigerians.

Noya Sedi, Global Rights Programme Officer for Women and Gender, explained that the workshop aimed to promote effective community referral pathways for addressing sexual and gender-based violence (SGBV) in the North West and to emphasise the critical role of Sexual Assault Referral Centres (SARCs) in properly handling SGBV cases.

She said they intended to bridge the gap between informal community-based responses and formal support systems, integrating community dialogue committees with established structures to improve referral pathways and response mechanisms to GBV.

The training also underlined the importance of community involvement, as local members often serve as the first point of contact for survivors. The project stresses continued community-driven dialogue to enhance safety and awareness for all.

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