Refugee Father Uses Daughter As Collateral For N600,000 Loan

                                                               Mary  and father Edt Okon
    You read some stories and just wonder why. This is the story
    of a fisherman, Edet Okon who had fled his ancestral home in Efut Obot Ikot in
    the ceded Bakassi Peninsula in March 2013 when Cameroonian gendermanes attacked
    the village in which a lot of indigenes lost their lives and scores sustained
    varying degrees of life-threatening injuries. This led Edet Okon and his family
    to a dusty village in Akwa Ikot Eyo Edem, Cross Rivers State where there story
    even went worse.
    Shortly after they began living as a refugee there, Edet discovered
    his first daughter was down with blood cancer and he didn’t want her to juts
    die unattended too. So he decided to use his 12-year old daughter, Mary as collateral to borrow N600,000 from a man in calabar. The girl later died, and
    19months after, he is yet to pay the said money, which has made Mary to be
    living in agony with her father’s creditor. Continue below to read the rest of
    the story as reported by Punch.

    His daughter now a collateral
    Okon, who joined our correspondent on a tour of the
    overcrowded refugee camps, appeared less bothered about the life of squalor
    they now lead.
    The fisherman lost his first daughter, Blessing, to the cold
    hands of death in September 2013, after battling with blood cancer for five
    months.
    But Okon’s agony did not end with Blessing’s death. Indeed,
    he now lives in the pool of the anguish of a man who has to practically sell
    his child into slavery. To raise funds for the series of medical tests, drugs,
    feeding and hospital bills incurred by Blessing, he opted to secure loans from
    someone to save her dying daughter.
    With no property to guarantee the loan, Okon gave up his
    second daughter, Mary, as collateral to secure the sum of N600, 000 given to
    him in installments.
    Our correspondent gathered that the creditor is a civil
    servant based in Calabar.
    “I was desperate to save Blessing from dying. Her situation
    had become critical at that time. That was the only thing I could do to salvage
    the situation. I am heartbroken,” Okon said, as his voice faded off, breaking
    down in tears.
    As tears rolled down his cheeks, he recalled the day he
    ‘sold’ her daughter into servitude.
    “I don’t know what came over me. It was sheer desperation I
    gave out my daughter so that the man would accept to give us the money,” Okon
    added, fighting back regrets of what many are likely to regard as condemnable.
    Ufot
    Our correspondent reached out to the intermediary, Daniel
    Ufot. He helped Okon to negotiate the N600, 000 loan from the creditor. On
    getting to the residence of the 59-year-old Ufot, who lives some five
    kilometres away from the camp, our correspondent found Mary in his residence.
    Ufot explained that some plain-cloth security operatives
    keeping watch on the camp had asked him to bring Mary from Calabar to meet with
    his father who he had not seen in 19 months.
    “I do not know Okon from Adam. But since I’m an expert in
    money lending, I offered to help him after having learnt of his predicament on
    how he had been battling to save the life of his daughter.
    “But unfortunately, he could not provide any form of
    collateral to secure the loan. But the creditor, in his magnanimity, agreed to
    have her daughter as collateral since she was the only valuable ‘thing’ he
    could offer,” Ufot said.
    In a chat with this correspondent, Mary, who was a junior
    secondary school 2 pupil before they left Bakassi in March, 2013, has since
    dropped out of school following their displacement from the oil rich peninsular.
    She shared horrible tales of inhuman treatment in the hands of her father’s
    creditor.
    Every morning, Mary hawks bottle water on the streets of
    Calabar, where, incidentally, Mary Slessor stopped the killing of twins.
    Observers may also spot the irony in the name of the legendary missionary and
    the enslaved Mary Okon. She added that on any day she failed to exhaust the
    sales of her wares, her new guardians descended heavily on her, beating her
    mercilessly in the process.
    “The man my father is owing has three female children and
    some other relatives are also putting up with us in the house. They normally
    give me a revenue target of N1, 000 daily.
    “And sometimes when the market is bad and I don’t finish
    selling the water, they beat me up. They treat me very badly. I eat only once
    in a day and that is in the morning.
    “I wash all their clothes, including the ladies’ pants, and
    do other house chores, too. And if I hesitate on washing their pants, they get
    infuriated and throw objects at me at will. I will not feel happy if I go back
    there,” she narrated.
    Yet, Ufot insisted that he only brought Mary to meet with
    his father as a respite since he had not set his eyes on her for about 19
    months.
    “There are no signs that they would be repaying the loan. I
    only obeyed the instruction of the security men. She will be on her way back to
    the creditor’s place in Calabar,” Ufot said.
    When contacted, the Refugee Camp Leader, Etim Ene, confirmed
    to our correspondent on the telephone on Monday that Mary has indeed returned
    to the creditor in Calabar.
    Ene said, “Mary has been taken to the creditor’s house in
    Calabar South. He was taken away by the guarantor, on December 2.”
    Efforts by our correspondent to trace the address of the
    creditor, whose name is given as Asuquo Etim, said to be residing on Atimbo
    Road, Calabar South Local Government Area, was abortive. The creditor is said
    to be an employee of the Cross River State Urban Development Agency.
    Ufot had earlier refused to allow Mary to travel with our
    correspondent to her master’s residence for fear of the unknown.

    Mary’s mother was away in the farm during a visit by The
    Punch.

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