2 British Nigerian women assaulted & detained in China for 2 months 
Two British Nigerian woman have been detained in China for more than two months after their dream holiday turned to nightmare.
Modupe Idowu, 59, and her friend Esther Jubril Badmos, 48, were arrested after becoming embroiled in a dispute at a shoe shop
in the city of Guangzhou.
They were locked up in 'hell-like' conditions at a detention centre
 for 38 days and although they have now been released, the two women 
remain trapped in the country as their visas have expired and 
authorities refuse to issue them new ones.
 
Mrs Idowu's desperate family said the
 two women's ordeal began Ms Badmos asked the shop to amend an order she
 had lodged earlier in the trip.
She was then assaulted by two members of staff before both women went to a police station.
Mrs Idowu, from Islington, North London witnessed a vicious attack on her friend.
Daughter
 Sarah Murray said: 'Although Esther tried to defend herself, she was 
pushed to the floor, kicked and beaten - and handfuls of her hair were 
ripped out.
'A security
 guard locked them in a room and another man, who we think is the shop 
owner's brother, came to the room and punched Esther.'
When
 they arrived at the police station their passports were seized and they
 were pressurised into signing paperwork they didn't understand, before 
being flung into a cell overnight without food and moved to a detention 
centre the next day.
Ms Idowu, who is known as Mary, was 
put in a cell with six other women - forced to sleep on a wooden plank 
and go to the toilet in front of the other prisoners.
Her friend was taken to the centre's hospital where she was treated for her injuries.
Meanwhile Mrs Idowu's five children 
have struggled to find out any information about their mother - despite 
paying lawyers in China around £4,000 to find out - and two of them flew
to the country to track her down at the end of July.
Both
women were released on July 29 but since then have been met with an 
onslaught of demands including a £20,000 claim for damages from the shop
owner, which was eventually settled with £4,500.
But their visas have now expired and 
they cannot be issued with new ones until police provide paperwork to 
show the charges had been dropped.
Despite endless visits to the police station, officers refuse to tell them when, and if, the documentation will be provided.
Mrs Murray said she barely recognised her mum when she saw her come out of prison.
'When
 I saw her, I thought she looked like an old woman. She could not walk 
properly. She was so frail and so skinny as she had lost a couple of 
stone as she barely ate.'
Mrs
 Murray, who returned from China last week, added: 'I can't really put 
this experience into words. We are totally confused. It's like watching a
 horror film.'
Her 
sister, Julie Idowu, 26 said: 'Our pain is very real. I have been crying
 every day. I have taken a lot of time off work as I'm so worried about 
my mum.
'Her health and mental state is a big concern as well as the fact that she has missed her operation.
'It's an injustice that my mum has been held for all this time for witnessing an assault on her friend.
Her
 other sister, Elizabeth Idowu, criticised lawyers, saying: 'People are 
exploiting our despair. They are making money out of our continued 
suffering.'
A Foreign 
and Commonwealth Office spokeswoman said they were aware of the 
situation and were providing assistance, but could not comment further 
and said it was a matter for the Chinese.
Culled from Daily Mail UK 
 
 
 
 
 
          
      
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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