In a new dimension in the war against begging, the Special
Offences Court in Alausa area of Ikeja, Lagos, Southwest Nigeria has
sent 30 beggars to Kirikiri and Badagry Prisons for soliciting for alms
and other offences.
The Lagos State Government had charged them to court for constituting
nuisance in public by begging for alms. The government says it is no
longer going to be business as usual as it has vowed to prosecute erring
beggars on the streets of Lagos. The Attorney General of Lagos State
was the prosecutor in the case. Some of the count charges against the
beggars included conducting themselves as disorderly persons without
visible means of livelihood and thus committed an offence under the
criminal law of Lagos State. They were also charged with conducting
themselves in a manner likely to cause breach of peace and for
receiving, demanding and collecting dues or unauthorised levy from
persons and thus committed offence punishable under the law on illegal
collection of dues in public places.
The beggars, 39 in number pleaded guilty to the offences and were
consequently sent to Kirikiri and Badagry Prisons for one month pending
when the final judgment would be delivered by the judge. Nine of them,
as a result of their disabilities were rejected by prison officials and
were then taken to the Lagos State Rehabilitation Home, Majidun, Ikorodu
on the outskirts of Lagos. Some of the beggars prosecuted, were said to
have attacked government officials during a rampage at the Lagos State
Rehabilitation Home, Majidun, the place where they were being
rehabilitated. Thirteen other beggars were also arraigned on Friday by
the government at the same Special Offences Court. Three of the beggars
were sentenced to 72 hours community service or pay a fine of N5,000,
while 10 others were sentenced to three months imprisonment or pay fine
of N10,000 each. Three others were sentenced directly to 72 hours
community service without an option of fine.
Special Adviser to the Governor of Lagos State on Youth and Social
Development, Dr. Dolapo Badru said government decided to begin
prosecution of beggars because it had exhausted its patience with the
beggars. “We still rehabilitate some of them, but most of them don’t
want to be rehabilitated and they don’t want to work. They feel more
comfortable preying on people with superstitious beliefs. Some people
believe that if they are unlucky in certain cases or looking for certain
ways to make it in life, what they need to do is to give alms to
beggars so that their fortune can change. Some believe that if someone
debars their progress in life, what they need to do is to give money to
beggars. Lots of beggars now prey on these people’s superstitious
beliefs to get money from them. Many of them pretend to be blind,
crippled, among others. They make more money than many people gainfully
employed,” he explained.
Badru added that the cosmopolitan nature of Lagos had made it
possible for barons to ship beggars to the metropolis to beg for alms,
making lots of money, stressing that many of them felt so comfortable
begging for alms on roads. “We have tried a lot to rehabilitate them by
making some of them to learn trade, but they don’t want to work. Some of
them don’t want to use the skill we taught them to work, but they
prefer to be on the road because they make more money at a go than using
their skills. What we do now is that when we have overcrowding at the
rehabilitation homes, we re-unite some of them with their families.
However, some people rescued from the street more than once are
prosecuted. We have sent 30 of them to Kirikiri and Badagry Prisons,” he
stated. Some of the beggars prosecuted are Fatima Jubril, Sanusi
Muhammed, Lado Amadu, Badayani Garuba, Denyaya Isali, Beto Manu, Garuba
Ibrahim, Aruna Yau, Dauda Amadu and Magada Salisu.
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