Interesting how this story breaks on
World Hijab (headbag) Day (See next post). Naomi Oni, 20, was left with
severe burns on her head, neck, arms, legs and body after she was
attacked in east London (heavy Muslim area). She has spent the past
month having skin grafts and almost went blind, although she has now
recovered partial sight.
Naomi Oni, Before and After attack
UK Daily Mail (h/t Maria J)
Her attacker was dressed like a Muslim woman in a niqab, so Ms Oni
could not see their face. Police have no idea who was responsible for
the vicious attack, or why they did it. (Considering
that acid attacks on women are rampant in the Muslim world and Muslims
consider shops like Victoria’s Secret to be blasphemy against Islam, the
police shouldn’t be wasting their time chasing EDL members) The
shop assistant- who is sole carer for her disabled mother Marian
Yalekhue, 52 – was making the five-minute journey back to their flat
from the bus stop when she heard someone.
She had just finished a late shift at
the Westfield Stratford store and was on the phone to her boyfriend Ato
Owede, 23, at 12.40am. ’I’d been working a late shift and was talking to
my boyfriend about what we were going to do for New Year when I saw
this Muslim woman wearing a niqab covering her face,’ she told the
Evening Standard.
I thought it was a bit strange at that
time of night, but she didn’t say anything and I kept on walking. ’Then
I felt a splash on my face. It burned and I screamed out. I started
running and screaming, holding my face, all the way home. I didn’t look
back. ’I got home and I was screaming and banging on the door. I was
hysterical. Luckily my godmother, who is a pharmacist, was at home with
my mum and she helped me and kept dipping my face in water and trying to
calm me down until the police and ambulance got there.
‘I was in shock. Saying: “Who would do
that? Who would do that?” How could anyone do this?’. She has released
the shocking images of her disfigured face in an appeal for help to
catch the attacker whose identity was concealed behind the Muslim
women’s dress which completely covers the face apart from the eyes. Ms
Oni decided to speak out after police failed to establish any motive
behind the December 30 attack or identify a suspect.
[Photos below are of acid attacks by family members, husbands, and boyfriends on Muslim women]
She said the attack had ‘destroyed’
her life and left her too afraid to venture out or even show her face in
public. ’I look in the mirror and it just isn’t me. I’ll never look the
same again,’ she said. ‘I’ve always been outgoing and confident in my
job and in my personal life, used to getting attention for the way I
dress or my hair, but now I don’t want anyone looking at me.
‘I don’t want people to see me in
public. I don’t want to get the Tube or the bus. If I have to go to the
hospital I take a taxi. ’I don’t know if I’ll ever be able to go back to
my job. I was planning to go to college in September to study media and
fashion, but I don’t even know if I’ll be able to do that.’
The store assistant has been told she
faces months if not years of skin grafts and further plastic surgery and
even then is likely to be left with severe facial scarring. She and her
mother say they are too afraid to go back to their council flat in
Dagenham. They are currently sleeping on a friend’s sofa-bed after
turning down the offer to be rehoused in Tottenham on safety grounds.
Ms Oni said she had been inspired by
the story of Katie Piper, the model who launched a charity and spoke out
publicly after falling victim to an acid attack orchestrated by her
boyfriend, but that she would never feel safe with her attacker still at
large. ’Even with the support of my family and friends and boyfriend I
feel very alone,’ she said. ‘Nothing is going to be same anymore.’
Officers from Barking and Dagenham are investigating. No arrests have been made and inquiries are ongoing.
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