Lagos State police command has arrested two heartless women who allegedly rented babies for a sum of N1,500 and use the kids to beg for money in Lagos.
According to The Nation, three (3) babies who are less than one month old were recovered from them. Hadiza Nosiru and Salamotu Salitu were arrested by the monitoring team of Lagos State Ministry of Youth and Social Development for renting the babies which is a crime under the law.
They have been taken to the Rehabilitation and Training Centre at Majidun, new Ikorodu.
Preliminary investigation showed that the women were not the biological mothers of the babies. The babies the ministry said, were given out to the women by their parents, who are paid daily.
One of the babies mothers, who was paraded at the state secretariat on Alausa, Ikeja, yesterday gave her name as Tawa Aregbesola from Ibadan, the Oyo State Capital. She said she had an agreement with one of the suspects to take her baby for alms begging between 5pm and 7pm daily for between N1000 and N1500.
Aregbesola, a mother of four, said she did not know where her baby is usually taken to adding that she was oblivious of the consequences.
Youth and Social Development Commissioner Mrs Uzamat Akinbile-Yussuf said efforts would be intensified to stop street begging.
She expressed displeasure at the use of babies for begging, exposing them to hazards on the streets.
Mrs Akinbile-Yussuf urged the public to help the government in eradicating the menace.
The commissioner noted that the practice was prevalent among female beggars especially from the north. She promised to take legal steps to deter others who may also wasn’t to indulge in the proactive.
They have been taken to the Rehabilitation and Training Centre at Majidun, new Ikorodu.
Preliminary investigation showed that the women were not the biological mothers of the babies. The babies the ministry said, were given out to the women by their parents, who are paid daily.
One of the babies mothers, who was paraded at the state secretariat on Alausa, Ikeja, yesterday gave her name as Tawa Aregbesola from Ibadan, the Oyo State Capital. She said she had an agreement with one of the suspects to take her baby for alms begging between 5pm and 7pm daily for between N1000 and N1500.
Aregbesola, a mother of four, said she did not know where her baby is usually taken to adding that she was oblivious of the consequences.
Youth and Social Development Commissioner Mrs Uzamat Akinbile-Yussuf said efforts would be intensified to stop street begging.
She expressed displeasure at the use of babies for begging, exposing them to hazards on the streets.
Mrs Akinbile-Yussuf urged the public to help the government in eradicating the menace.
The commissioner noted that the practice was prevalent among female beggars especially from the north. She promised to take legal steps to deter others who may also wasn’t to indulge in the proactive.
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