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You’re Not As Innocent As You Claim – Lawyer Tells UNILAG Female Student Who Was ‘Gang-r*ped’

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You’re Not As Innocent As You Claim – Lawyer Tells UNILAG Female Student Who Was ‘Gang-r*ped’
youre not as innocent as you claim lawyer tells unilag female student who was gang rped

According to TheNation,the trial of the five Unilag student alleged to have

gng-rped a fellow student, resumed on Tuesday, with Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Mrs Abimbola Akeredolu, telling an Ikeja S*xual Offences and Domestic Violence Court that the victim is not as innocent as she claimed.

Akeredole who is the defence counsel to Chuka Chukwu, 19, one of the five accused students — insisted that the girl, then 17, was not a naive person as she portrayed herself to the court. .

Other defendants are Moboluwaji Omowole, 19, Peace Nwankama, 19, James Aguedu, 20 and Josephine Osemeka, 20.

To prove her assertion, the defense counsel asked if she has ever been to Ocean waves and Eclipse nightclubs, the survivor responded that she sang at the 2019 Felabration and performed at the event of the musician Ycee in August 2019.

She said that she had been an entertainer half of her life and that she had not been to the two Nightclubs. But the senior lawyer disagreed with her and said that in 2017, the survivor launched a music track at a time she claimed she was 17, naïve and innocent. .

To further prove her assertions, Akeredolu proceeded to read aloud some of the lyrics of the song: “I feel so lonely, so paralysed, got no guy to call my own, so when I saw the look in your eyes, I couldn’t help to fantasize. .

I feel somebody coming home, meaningful love with depth and potential is what I need all the time. Just want you to be mine, so grab on my waist, let’s bust up the place. Anything that you do is fine, that’s why there is no need to be shy…

After reading the lyrics, Akeredolu said that they were not written by a naive person. She thereafter presented to the complainant, five photographs — in which the complainant was partially clad — to identify. After the complainant identified herself, the photographs were admitted by the court for identification purposes.

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