The Gombe State Police Command says it received no less than 43 rape cases between January and July.
Oqua Etim, Commissioner of Police in the state, disclosed this in an interview in Gombe on Monday.
Mr Etim, who said the crime was a major challenge in the state, revealed that 37 of the reported cases had been charged to court, while six were still under investigation.
He said the cases received were quite worrisome because the victims included minors, while in some cases, perpetrators were sometimes family members.
Mr Etim added that while arrests of perpetrators who were eventually charged to court had been intensified, concerted advocacy was being carried out to check the rising cases of sexual abuse in the state.
The police boss said the command is collaborating with critical stakeholders at the grassroots and intensifying advocacy to address the challenge.
According to him, the police had reached out to several critical stakeholders from religious, traditional and community leaders, schools, among others, to help in the fight against rape and other sexual abuses.
Mr Etim expressed worry over the unwillingness of rape victims and their family members to report rape cases to the police.
He stressed that rape cases should not be covered but exposed for proper prosecution of perpetrators in the interest of the victims, society and to serve as deterrent.
“We have had cases of people mounting influence on us, claiming that they don’t want people to know and stigmatise them, but we always insist that a crime is a crime.
“I have vowed that under my watch, any parent whose child was abused but compromised would be charged to court under the appropriate laws.
“This is because I have heard that some parents asked for monetary compensation at the risk of the lives of these children,” he said.
Mr Etim also berated some parents for allowing their children to be used as labourers on people’s farms and as hawkers.
He noted that giving birth to children without plans to train and educate them is a crime.
According to him, parents have a responsibility to cater for their children by ensuring that they are not exposed to the risk of being sexually abused.