Trafficking
of under-aged girls from Nigeria to Saudi Arabia is now in the rise,
Executive Secretary of the National Agency for the Prohibition of
Traffic in Persons and other related Matters (NAPTIP) Mrs Beatrice
Jedy-Agba has said.
She also said that “Available
statistics indicate that 60% of the prostitutes in Turin, Italy and
Antwerp in Belgium are Nigerian girls.” Speaking before the House of
Representatives committee on Diaspora yesterday, Mrs. Jedy-Agba said her
agency has uncovered new route of trafficking under the cover of
pilgrimage.
“It appears from the report
of our staff who have participated in Hajj operations that there is an
increased trafficking activity under the cover of the annual
pilgrimage. Traffickers have devised an insidious plan to desecrate the
Holy Land of Mecca with trafficked victims,” she said.
The
NAPTIP boss said the agency has identified two major trafficking
routes – the Lagos-Cotonuo-Moussa- Ouagadougou-Mali route accounts for
about 75% of trafficked victims to Europe and the Sokoto-Bori Koni in
Niger Republic and Katsina Maradi-Niamey-Agadez-Libya.
She told the committee that there
was increase in internal trafficking at the border towns of Calabar,
Port Harcourt, Uyo, Badagry, Benin, Kebbi, Sokoto and Maiduguri, with
about 8 million children at the risk of being trafficked. Reports
equally showed that there are large numbers of Nigerian women regularly
taken to other West and Central African countries of Gabon, Cameroon,
Ghana, Chad, Togo, Benin, Niger, Burkina-Faso and the Gambia for sexual
exploitation under the guise of taking them abroad for employment
opportunities.
A recent fact finding mission
conducted by the agency confirmed the existence of many brothels in
Bamako, Mopti, Kayes, Skies, Gao, all in Mail populated by young
Nigerians between the ages of 14 and 17 years being used as sex
slaves,” she said.
Rep Abike Dabiri-Erewa (ACN,
Lagos), who chairs the committee, promised that the National Assembly
will look into the possibilities of amending the constitution to ease
the process of domesticating international protocol on human
trafficking.
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