A 42-year-old father, Pedro Anegbe, has 
told an Ebute Meta Magistrate’s Court that a spirit asked him to rape 
his 15-year-old daughter to get a job.
He said the voice ordred him to rape the girl shortly after he lost his job and was idle at home.
Anegbe was arraigned on two counts for 
defiling his 15-year-old daughter (name withheld) at their home on 
Ifelodun Street, Fatolu Ipaja, Lagos State.
The Investigating Police Officer, Sergeant Bakare Murtala, told the court his findings in the course of investigation.
Murtala said, “The defendant is the 
biological father of the girl. She told us her father had sexually 
harassed her. We questioned him on his daughter’s allegation and he 
confessed to the crime. He said he had raped her twice.”
The magistrate, Olanrewaju Olatunji, asked Anegbe why he raped his own daughter.
The father of three said, “I am actually
 living with my wife and three children. I have two girls and a boy. She
 is my first born. I have had sex with her just two times. The first was
 on January 27, 2014. But I cannot remember the date of the second one.”
On how it all began, he said, “I did it 
because I thought it was God talking to me, but later I knew it was an 
evil spirit. The voice said I needed power. To get the power, the voice 
said I must damage some things.
“I started destroying the clutch and 
brake of the vehicle I was given to drive. Then the voice told me I 
should stop delivering money to the owner of the vehicle after each 
day’s work. I stopped and I was sacked.
“I became idle after I lost my job. The 
voice came again, saying I should have sex with my daughter or else I 
would not get another job. That was why I slept with her.”
However, despite his admission, the defendant pleaded not guilty to the charge of rape.
He also told the court that he wanted his case tried at the High Court.
Olatunji said, “You have confessed that 
you raped your daughter, why then did you still say you were not guilty 
of the crime after the charge was read to you? Don’t you understand the 
charge or what is the problem?”
“I am just forcing myself to talk, because the voice said I should not say anything,” Anegbe said.
His defence counsel, Rasaq Adeyemi, 
citing Section 115 of the Law of Lagos State, Nigeria, 2011, prayed the 
court to admit him to bail in liberal terms since he was still presumed 
innocent until proven guilty by the court.
In his ruling, the magistrate said, 
“This is a bailable offence, but it is a family matter. The defendant is
 to be remanded in prison pending legal advice from the Directorate of 
Public Prosecution.”
The matter was adjourned till April 4, 2014.

 
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