Tears streamed down the face of
31-year-old Blessing (not real name) as she narrated how her whirlwind
romance with a 67-year-old Irish construction worker in Lagos, ended in
her getting infected with HIV.
For Blessing, her pain was not just
because she had got the virus but that the man, she identified simply as
Jim, even intensified his sexual intercourse with her after he learnt
of his status more than two years ago.
Blessing walked into the Area F Police Command, Ikeja on Thursday, inconsolable to report Jim’s alleged action.
When she faced journalists on Friday,
however, things took a dramatic turn as she screamed at reporters and
shielded the man she had accused from being interviewed and
photographed.
“You see what you have done now? We could have settled this at home,” she was heard telling the man, who also became furious and lashed out at reporters.“Jackass, liars. Get out of here,” the Irish man told journalists.
When the scene calmed down somewhat, Blessing launched into a narration of a romance, which she said later devastated her.
She said, “We have been dating for some years. I work as a real estate agent, while he works with a construction company.
“In January 2014, he became ill. He was
always sweating and running temperature. So, I accompanied him to see
his doctor in a hospital in Ikeja. He was given treatment for malaria
but the hospital also ran some tests and usually, they run HIV tests
without telling the patient just to be sure.
“When the result came out, we went to
see the doctor. I heard the man asking him if I was his sex partner but
he said no. The man also asked if he could speak with him in my
presence, he said no. When we left, he was given some drugs, which he
hid from me.
“Any time he wanted to take the drug, he
hid it. Then one day, I caught him taking the same drug. I asked him
what it was for and he said it was for a recurrent leg pain he was
getting. I wrote down the name of the drug and searched for it on
Google. That was when I learnt that it was anti-retroviral drug used for
HIV.
“I confronted Jim and asked if he had
HIV, he denied it flatly. I then told him to give me his doctor’s number
so that I could confirm myself. He said no. While he was sleeping, I
took his doctor’s number from his phone and called the man. The doctor
told me that he could not speak on the phone and said I should come and
see him. When I went there, he broke the news to me that Jim was HIV
positive. He then decided to run a test on me. It confirmed that I was
HIV positive. I felt like dying.
“I was so angry because he deliberately
infected me. I know this because he protected his family. Around the
time we went to the doctor together, he sent his wife abroad to ensure
she did not contract the virus. But in my case, the sex even intensified
that I was happy that he was falling in love with me more every day.”
Blessing said after the initial test,
which showed she was HIV positive, the doctor recommended a second test,
which again proved that she was indeed HIV positive.
According to her, she was devastated and angry at how her life had changed for the worse.
“Jim denied that he infected me and even accused me of infecting him even though the doctor said this could not have been so considering the fact that it had not manifested in my body in any way, while he had fallen sick long ago,” Blessing said.
She said despite her anger, she still did not want to report the matter to the police.
She said, “But I told Jim that he had to
take care of the cost of my medication and had to make sure I was
comfortable since he was the one who infected me. He then agreed to pay
me N2.5m.
“But he started abusing me. He would say
no man would dare marry a girl with a disease like me. I threatened to
report him to the police and he said I should go ahead. He said I would
become depressed and commit suicide due to stigma if I did that.
“I packed out of his house in anger. Then, one day, I went to his house and found him in bed with my best friend. He did not care. The humiliation was why I decided to finally come to report to the police.”
In Nigeria, non-disclosure of HIV status
to a sexual partner and deliberate infection of a partner are criminal
offences enshrined in the Sexual Offences Act 2015.
Section 24 and 39 of the law
criminalises the “intentionally, knowingly and willfully” transmitting
HIVand an act where a person “intentionally fails to disclose to the
person in respect of whom an act which causes penetration is being
committed, that he or she is infected by HIV or any other
life-threatening sexual transmissible disease.”
Jim, who was furious for most part of the encounter with journalists, continued to say that Blessing infected him instead.
“She wanted money from me,” he said.
Jim said he had been in Nigeria for more than 40 years.
The Police Public Relations Officer, DolapoBadmus, said the police were still conducting investigation on the case.
She said,
“At the moment, we are treating the lady as the victim and the man as the suspect. If our investigation reveals anything to the contrary, we will amend our focus on the case.
“But we are also going to look for the friend, whom the complainant said she found naked with the man to determine her status. If we find her and she requires test and treatment, we will ensure she gets that as soon as possible.”
-PUNCH
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