Tag: Prostitution

  • Ten teenage girls forced into prostitution in Ghana return to Nigeria for rehabilitation

    Ten teenage girls forced into prostitution in Ghana return to Nigeria for rehabilitation

    Ten Nigerian teenage who went viral for human trafficking and prostitution in Ghana have returned to Nigeria for comprehensive counselling and rehabilitation.

    The young girls with an average age of 16 were lured into prostitution in Ghana by a Nigerian man.

    .However, Nigerians in the Diaspora Organisation in Ghana reportedly conducted the rescue of the 10 trafficked Nigerian teenagers.

    The NiDCOM Chairman, Abike Dabiri-Erewa, through the commission’s spokesperson Abdur-Rahman Balogun, said the girls arrived at the Lagos International Airport on Tuesday night, June 11, 2024, accompanied by representatives from the Imo State Governor’s office, including the Deputy Speaker and the Commissioner for Women Affairs, as well as staff from the Nigerians in Diaspora Commission.

    The girls, upon arrival, were received and profiled by officials from the National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons.

    The NiDCOM Boss assured that NAPTIP would continue to monitor the girls’ progress and ensure they receive the necessary support and care.

    According to her, “The girls arrived at Lagos International Airport on Tuesday night, accompanied by the representatives of the Imo State Governor (the deputy Speaker) and the Commissioner for Women Affairs and NiDCOM Staff.

    “They were received and received by officials of NAPTIP.”

    She added that they are now in the custody of the Imo and Plateau governments for proper counselling and rehabilitation, assuring that NAPTIP will follow up on their progress.

  • I’m into prostitution to raise fund for my project – final-year student confesses

    I’m into prostitution to raise fund for my project – final-year student confesses

    A suspected commercial S3x worker has confessed that she resorted to prostitution due to lack of money she needed to complete her academic studies.

    The suspect, identified as Esther John from Akwa-Ibom State, was among the 20 suspects arrested in Onitsha, Anambra State by Operatives of the Operation Clean and Healthy Anambra (OCHA) Brigade.

    She said: “I’ve been struggling to complete my studies due to financial constraints. I was looking for money to complete school clearance and project when a friend introduced me to the business.

    “Today is my first day to be here. There is no money for my project.

    The date for the defence has been fixed for next week and they said if I must defend, I must pay all my fees. I don’t have shishi (a dime) and there is no one to run to.

    “Since my HND 1 till now, there has been nobody to pay my fees. The person assisting me before now has died. If there’s anyone who can help me, I won’t come back here again.”

  • Ogun police arrest man who sold wife, son for 2million naira

    Ogun police arrest man who sold wife, son for 2million naira

    A man aged 36 years whose name has been given as Kingsley Essien is cooling off in police cell for allegedly selling his Wife and two-year-old son for a sum of 2 million naira

    It was gathered that his wife was sold for 1.4 Million naira while he received 600,000 for the sale of his son.

    The police in Ogun State said the husband had trafficked his wife to Mali for prostitution at the rate of ₦1.4million.

    Confirming the incident on Thursday, the Ogun State police spokesman, Abimbola Oyeyemi, disclosed that Essien’s arrest followed a report lodged at the Agbara division by the wife, Bright Essien.

    The woman was said to have reported to the police that her husband had sometime in October 2021, lied that he had secured a job for her in Bamako, Mali, and that he had in the past assisted many to secure a job in Mali.

    Not suspecting any foul play, Bright said she agreed to go to Mali, but she got to the African country and discovered that she had been sold to a human trafficking cartel headed by a woman at the rate of N1,400,000.

    “While in Mali, she was forced into prostitution, but she later found her way to the Nigerian embassy in Bamako where she was assisted back to Nigeria,” Oyeyemi said.

    He added that as the wife returned to Nigeria, she could not find her son and this prompted her to report at the police station.

    “Upon the report, the DPO of Agbara division, SP Abiodun Salau, detailed his detectives to go after the suspect, and he was eventually arrested.

    “On interrogation, the suspect confessed to the commission of the crime, he confessed further that he sold the two-year-old son to somebody at the rate of six hundred thousand Naira,” Oyeyemi said.

    Meanwhile, the Ogun State Commissioner of Police, Lanre Bankole, has directed that the man be moved to the Anti-human Trafficking and Child Labour Unit of the state CIID for investigation, directing police officers to trace and arrest the buyer of the stolen so as to recovered.

  • “I no know say money dey Ashewo” — Lady quits day job for runs girl after making N50k in one night [VIDEO]

    “I no know say money dey Ashewo” — Lady quits day job for runs girl after making N50k in one night [VIDEO]

    A yet-to-be identified Nigerian lady has taken to social media to disclose that she has quit her day job as a sales representative to become a full-time runs girl.

     

    The lady, speaking in a video making rounds online, said she arrived at the decision of facing her new found job after she was paid N50,000 by a client to satisfy his erotical desire for one night.

     

    According to her, she has not earned that much in her three months of working as a sales representative and sees no reason to return to the job.

     

    The lady, who was flaunting some naira notes in the video presumed to be her earnings from her night-out job, said she didn’t know prostitution is that lucrative and pays well.

     

    Watch her video below:

     

     

    What the law says about prostitution

    It is against the background of prostitution being taken as a lucrative job by some women that some lawyers gave their views.

    An Abuja-based lawyer, Oyero Ezekiel, said no law directly bans prostitution in Nigeria.

     

    “This is an issue that has been raging for some time now. There’s actually no law that directly bans prostitution as the case may be in Nigeria.

     

    “However, it is important to note that the Criminal Code criminalizes procuring and other related offences, which although may have a slight affiliation to prostitution, are not one and the same.

     

    “A careful perusal shows the following sections of the Criminal Code (sections 223, 224 and 225A) only outlaw procuring, defilement by threat and administration of drugs on girls and women.”

     

    Joseph Felix, a Jos-based lawyer, also said there is no general law against prostitution in Nigeria.

     

    However, he said, “Issues like prostitution, indecent dressing and sexual assaults do not necessarily need a law to say they are prohibited.

     

    “When they become prevalent, what the government does is to create a form of indictable offence. You may not try them for prostitution but you may try them for illegal assembly.”

     

    Another lawyer, Johnson Omede, said while there is no place in the Constitution that prohibits prostitution, there are other laws that the constitution has empowered that provided for the crime.

     

    “There is also the Penal Code Act of FCT, 1990 that provides against prostitution. It defines prostitutes as vagabonds. And whoever is convicted, has been found guilty of this offence, will be imprisoned for one month or a fine or both,” he said.

    Job

     

    Francis Uchenobarim, a lawyer, agreed with Mr Omede. He said: “There is a section of the penal code that prohibits prostitution.

     

    “In as much as the penal code has made these provisions, the Constitution is still clear on the right to freely associate with anybody.

     

    “That is Right to Freedom of Association as contained in the Constitution. If we are to follow this Constitution, that means as a Nigerian, you are free to meet with whoever you want to meet with.

     

    “Therefore, the Penal Code that penalizes people meeting with prostitutes or prostitutes meeting with other people might fail if tested in the court.”

     

    Prostitution and the law
    Although theNewsGuru.com (TNG) gathered that no particular part of the Constitution prohibits prostitution in Nigeria.

     

    However, sections 223 of the Criminal Code states that: “Any person who procures a girl or woman who is under the age of eighteen years to have unlawful carnal connection with any other person or persons, either in Nigeria or elsewhere;

     

    “Or procures a woman or girl to become a common prostitute, either in Nigeria, or elsewhere;

     

    “Or procures a woman or girl to leave Nigeria with intent that she may become an inmate of a brothel elsewhere;

     

    “Or procures a woman or girl to leave her usual place of abode in Nigeria, with intent that she may, for the purposes of prostitution, become an inmate of a brothel, either in Nigeria or elsewhere; is guilty of a misdemeanour, and is liable to imprisonment for two years.

     

    Meanwhile, FCT Penal Code Act criminalizes prostitution, solicitation.

    Chapter 532 of the Penal Code Act, Federal Capital of Abuja, 1990 criminalizes prostitution and solicitation of prostitutes.

     

    The law states that:

    “An ‘Idle person’ shall include a common prostitute behaving in a disorderly or indecent manner in a public place or persistently importuning or soliciting persons for the purpose of prostitution.

     

    “The term vagabond shall include any male person who knowingly lives wholly or in part on the earning of a prostitute or in any public place solicits or importunes for immoral purposes; and

     

    “Whoever is convicted as a vagabond shall be punished with imprisonment which may extend to two years or with fine which may extend to four hundred and fifty naira or both.”

     

    However, while the Abuja law criminalizes prostitution and solicitation of prostitutes, no male have been arrested for either prostitution or solicitation.

     

    Recall that sometime April 2019, Police officers in Abuja arrested 70 women at different night clubs and detained at Utako police station, claiming that they are prostitutes. This came barely two weeks after 30 women were arrested in the same city for the same reason.

     

    Also, some officials of the Federal Capital Territory Administration (FCTA) had raided a popular night club, Caramelo, and arrested 34 female nude dancers.

     

    It was gathered that some of the women were later released on bail while 32 others were charged to a mobile court, 27 were convicted and sentenced to one month in prison for prostitution.

     

  • Wike bans nightclubs, street prostitution in Rivers

    Wike bans nightclubs, street prostitution in Rivers

    Rivers State Governor, Nyesom Wike has banned Nightclubs and prostitution in the state.

    Wike gave the order in his New Year broadcast in Port Harcourt on Saturday, Wike banned nightclub activities including nighttime trading and street prostitution especially along Abacha road and surrounding streets particularly in the Casablanca area.

    According to Wike, the move will “Stop the harmful effects of this depraved activities on the moral development of the children and society at large.”

    However, it remains unclear how long the ban will last, but certainly, the Governor has less than two years left in office.

    Wike further directed security agencies in the State to arrest and prosecute anyone attempting to violate the ban. He said a taskforce would be set up to this effect.

    The Governor Wike-led administration will come to an end after the general elections in 2023.

  • Wike sends demolition notice to Port Harcourt residents in New Year message

    Wike sends demolition notice to Port Harcourt residents in New Year message

    …bans street prostitution in Rivers

    …accuses FG of complicity over pandemic soot in Rivers

    Rivers State Governor Nyesom Wike has sent a demolition notice to residents of Port Harcourt and the Illabuchi areas of Diobu in his New Year message.

    According to Governor Wike, all shanties and makeshift structures in identified crime hotspots in the areas mentioned would be demolished from the second week of January 2022.

    Wike stated that this was in efforts to consolidate on the gains of the dislodgement and dislocation of criminal elements in Rivers and make the State safer and more secure.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Wike also in the New Year message said that those rebuilding shanties that had been demolished at Eleme or attempting to resume illegal trading activities at the closed Oginigba slaughter have one week to vacate or be arrested and charged to court.

    “Additionally, we have discovered that most vacant plots or uncompleted buildings in the Old and New Government Reservation Areas (GRA) and some other parts of Port Harcourt city and Obio/Akpor Local Government Areas have been hijacked and are now inhabited by criminal elements who are daily constituting menace to public safety.

    “We have therefore decided to end this danger by taking over all such abandoned plots and uncompleted buildings and re-allocate them to citizens who are ready to develop and put them into effective occupancy.

    “In a similar vein, we have revoked the certificates of occupancy of several undeveloped plots of land in old GRA, Port Harcourt, for breaching the covenants attached thereto, which we would also re-allocate to interested members of the public for immediate development as part of the ongoing efforts to restore the entire old GRA to its pristine state of development, beauty and serenity.

    “We will also not spare those contributing to the perennial flooding challenge in parts of Port Harcourt city and Obio/Akpor Local Government Area by blocking natural water and drainage channels with illegal landfilling, reclamation of wetlands or the construction of concrete structures.

    “Consequently, we shall recover and restore all landfilled or reclaimed wetlands and demolish all structures erected on natural water channels spanning from the Eastern bypass areas up to Abana and Eleme streets in Old GRA, Port Harcourt. Only those with genuine government permits and allocation papers will be duly compensated,” Wike said.

    Read the New Year message of Governor Wike broadcast live below:

    A STATE-WIDE BROADCAST BY HIS EXCELLENCY NYESOM EZENWO WIKE TO MARK THE 2022 NEW YEAR

    My dear people of Rivers State

    2. As the clock ticks down and as we look forward to ushering-in the New Year 2022, this is the time to give thanks to the Almighty God for his blessings and the opportunity to look into the future with greater hope and optimism.

    3. On behalf of my wife and the Government, let me thank all Rivers State citizens in particular, and Nigerians in general, for your continued love and support to our administration throughout the year 2021.

    3. Indeed, we cannot thank you enough for the trust, the solidarity, the cooperation and above all, your prayers for the success of our government and the peace and progress of our State.

    4. We also thank the police, the department of state security, the armed forces and the para military services for working round the clock to make and keep our dear State peaceful, safe and secure, not only in this festive season but throughout the outgoing year.

    5. Indeed, there is no denying the fact that crime and criminality have been at very low rates in Rivers State and citizens felt safer and more secure in 2021 than the previous years.

    6. With the cooperation of the security agencies we identified and destroyed most of the shanties that hitherto served as safe havens and hideouts for criminals, who have now been dislodged and dislocated from the State having lost the space and capacity from which they could operate with ease.

    7. To consolidate on the gains of the dislodgement and dislocation exercises, and make the State even safer and more secure, we have decided to demolish all shanties and makeshift structures in identified crime hotspots in Port Harcourt Township and the Illabuchi areas of Diobu from the second week of January 2022.

    8. Those rebuilding the shanties we had demolished at Eleme or attempting to resume illegal trading activities at the closed Oginigba slaughter have one week to vacate or be arrested and charged to court.

    9. Additionally, we have discovered that most vacant plots or uncompleted buildings in the Old and New Government Reservation Areas (GRA) and some other parts of Port Harcourt city and Obio/Akpor Local Government Areas have been hijacked and are now inhabited by criminal elements who are daily constituting menace to public safety.

    10. We have therefore decided to end this danger by taking over all such abandoned plots and uncompleted buildings and re-allocate them to citizens who are ready to develop and put them into effective occupancy.

    11. In a similar vein, we have revoked the certificates of occupancy of several undeveloped plots of land in old GRA, Port Harcourt, for breaching the covenants attached thereto, which we would also re-allocate to interested members of the public for immediate development as part of the ongoing efforts to restore the entire old GRA to its pristine state of development, beauty and serenity.

    12. We will also not spare those contributing to the perennial flooding challenge in parts of Port Harcourt city and Obio/Akpor Local Government Area by blocking natural water and drainage channels with illegal landfilling, reclamation of wetlands or the construction of concrete structures.

    13. Consequently, we shall recover and restore all landfilled or reclaimed wetlands and demolish all structures erected on natural water channels spanning from the Eastern bypass areas up to Abana and Eleme streets in Old GRA, Port Harcourt. Only those with genuine government permits and allocation papers will be duly compensated.

    14. Again, it is important to appreciate what we have done to successfully transform our capital city, Port Harcourt, to one of the most beautiful cities in Nigeria with well-paved streets, pedestrian walkways, dual carriage roads and flyovers.

    15. However, the beauty of the city is being defaced by illegal and indiscriminate trading on our streets, under flyovers and other unauthorized open spaces as well as the challenges with the current largely inefficient refuse disposal system.

    16. I wish to therefore remind citizens that the ban on street trading and commuting on motor cycles in Port Harcourt and Obio/Akpor Local Government Areas is still in force.

    17. Consequently, I hereby direct the task force on Illegal Street trading to arrest and prosecute all those:

    (i) shuttling with their motorcycles and or hawking foreign exchange along Birabi street, Hotel Presidential, GRA junction by Zenith Bank up to Tombia street; and

    (ii) trading on, under and around the Rumuola junction and flyover; Rumuogba junction and flyover; as well as Rumuokoro junction and flyover.

    18. Security personnel abetting illegal Street trading by collecting bribes and offering protection to street vendors are advised to desist forthwith or they would equally be made to face the wrath of the law.

    19. Furthermore, we have decided to end the menace of cart-pushers who have become notorious for indiscriminate scavenging and littering of wastes on street corners and the medians of major roads and highways across the State.

    20. These cart pushers and their unknown collaborators are also responsible for the recurring stealing of manhole covers, an act which endangers peoples’ lives and public safety on our roads.

    21. Consequently, the State Government has placed an immediate ban on the activities of cart pushers and directs law enforcement agencies to arrest and prosecute anyone who attempts to violate this ban.

    22. In addition, a taskforce would be put in place to enforce this ban while we plead with the courts in the interest of public safety and security to impose the severest of punishment under the law on any convicted manhole vandal.

    23. The indiscriminate and prolonged packing of trailers and other articulated vehicles along our streets is another environmental menace we must tackle to bring sanity to our cities and living environment.

    24. Consequently, I hereby direct the Chairmen of Port Harcourt, Ikwerre, Obio/Akpor, and Oyigbo Local Government Councils to within three weeks from today impound and or remove any trailer, trucks or articulated vehicle that is packed on the streets beyond 48 hours in their respective administrative jurisdictions.

    25. As we all know, achieving effective environmental sanitation in cities and urban centres is a global challenge, and ours is not an exception.

    26. However, we are determined to improve on our refuse disposal system by reviewing, overhauling and strengthening the legal, institutional and economic framework for a more effective delivery of sanitation services to residents.

    27. I urge that you bear with us for a while and things will certainly change for the better in our refuse disposal system.

    28. As an initial step towards achieving this objective, we have placed an immediate ban on the disposal of refuse on the streets or open spaces in both the old and new GRAs of Port Harcourt and Obio/Akpor Local Government Areas.

    29. Every household in both old and new GRAs must therefore procure and keep approved refuse disposal bins in the front of their houses to facilitate the door-to-door collection of the wastes they generate by designated contractors.

    30. We will not hesitate to revoke the certificate of occupancy of any house in these areas without a refuse disposal bin or whose occupants are caught disposing refuse on the streets or open spaces.

    31. We have also banned the posting of advert materials of any kind, including posters, fliers, pictures, artworks, placards or inscriptions on or under our flyovers, bridges, concrete walls and the safety barricades along the roads.

    32. We will establish environmental marshals to enforce compliance with our sanitation laws, including this ban, by arresting and prosecuting both the person who places the advert and the person and institution on whose behalf it is placed.

    33. Fellow citizens, we also have reason to be concerned about the operations and socially harmful activities of nightclubs within residential areas of our State.

    34. Apart from the noise and traffic nuisances suffered by innocent residents, no responsible government should continue to tolerate the open display and solicitation of sexual services, drug abuse and public intoxication that takes place along the streets and public areas abutting some of these nightclubs, lounges and bars by the youths, some, as young as under 14 years.

    35. Consequently, the State Government has placed an immediate ban on all nightclub activities, including night-time trading and street prostitution along Abacha road and surrounding streets to stop the harmful effect of these depraved activities on the moral development of our children and society at large.

    36. Let me also reiterate that we are as overly concerned as the public over the black soot environmental disaster that has continued to envelope Port Harcourt and upsetting residents for quite some time.

    37. As a State Government, we have drawn the attention of the Federal Government to this problem and requested for its intervention to stop the activities of illegal bunkering and artisanal crude oil refiners, which have been identified as the main sources of the soot pandemic.

    38. Unfortunately, the Federal Government has remained inexplicably silent over our request and even complicit to a large extent with the security agencies actively aiding, encouraging and protecting the artisanal refiners to continue with their harmful activities unabated.

    39. We have equally appealed without success to our people engaging in this illegal business to consider its negative effects on our economy, environment, public safety and public health and disengage from it.

    40. We will continue to engage and plead with the Federal Government to intervene and save our people from this serious environmental and health emergency.

    41. However, since the federal security agencies have largely refused to stop the illegal crude oil refining activities in the State, we have no option than to take necessary measures to tackle this particular and direct challenge to our collective health and survival by ourselves.

    42. Consequently, I have directed the Chairman of Port Harcourt City Local Government Council to go after all the illegal crude oil refining sites along Creek road and adjourning areas of the city and shut them down with immediate effect.

    43. Furthermore, all Local Government Chairmen are directed to work with community leaders to locate and identify those behind all illegal bunkering and crude oil refining sites in their localities and report to my office for further action.

    44. Once again, we express our sympathies to the victims of the recent fire incidences in the State, especially those who lost loved ones and valuable property.

    45. As a government we will continue to do our best to strengthen the State Fire Service to effectively intervene to mitigate the damage during fire incidents.

    46. However, members of the public also have the responsibility to do the right thing to prevent or avoid some of these fire incidents from happening and those who deliberately bury fuel and gas tanks in residential areas are certainly not doing the right thing, and should therefore relocate their precarious businesses to more convenient and less risky places.

    47. We wish to also express our concern over the poor compliance with the existing Covid-19 protocols by citizens and the effect on the transmission of the disease in the State.

    48. Believe it or not, Covid-19 is a reality that has already taken the lives of hundreds of thousands of people and disrupted economic activities across the world.

    49. Here in Rivers State the transmission of the virus continues to surge daily and we all need to act together to stop the diseases from further ravaging our State.

    50. We therefore appeal to all residents to make themselves available for testing and vaccination whether it is for your first, second or booster jab in addition to observing the existing preventive protocols, including social distancing and wearing of face masks to reduce the level of transmission.

    51. Let me also remind all government recognized traditional rulers that they are, at all times, subject to the authority and directives of the State Government and not to other allegiances, culture or otherwise.

    52. Therefore, the consistent absence of some first class traditional rulers, especially the Amayanabo of Okrika, the Amayanabo of Ogu, the Amayanabo of Kalabari and the Gbenemene Nyo-Khana from participating in State functions is unacceptable and will no longer be tolerated.

    53. Should they therefore continue to absent themselves from State functions or in the regular meetings and activities of the State Traditional Rulers Council, we would have no option than to direct their immediate replacement.

    54. Finally, as the New Year 2022 inevitably beckons, we wish to assure you that we will continue to do our best to meet the aspirations of our citizens for a more peaceful, safe and secure society throughout the Year 2022.

    55. We will continue to pursue our objectives for a stronger and more sustainable economy centred on fiscal discipline, revenue growth, job creation, and improved standard of living for all residents.

    56. We will continue to accelerate our development with the sustainable delivery of quality roads, bridges, schools, hospitals and other socio-economic infrastructure and complete all ongoing development projects across the State.

    57. I wish to, once again, thank our leaders, traditional rulers, elder statesmen, party chieftains, our women, our youths and the press for the warmth and support we have received throughout 2021.

    58. We wish to specially thank our religious leaders for their prayers for peace and progress as well as for their continuous support to our Government in the primary task of building the Rivers State of our collective dream.

    59. We remain grateful to God for the unprecedented peace, security and transformational strides the State is enjoying under our administration.

    60. But we must also be vigilant because our enemies, especially, members of the opposition, are not happy with the prevailing peace, security and the unprecedented achievements we have recorded; and are therefore determined to cause crisis and disturb our peace and joy if they have the opportunity.

    61. Let us therefore prayerfully continue to place our dear State and everyone in the safe and protective Hands of God Almighty through our Lord Jesus Christ.

    62. I wish each and every one a happy and prosperous New Year!

    63. May God continue to bless our dear Rivers State.

  • Woman arrested for forcing teenager daughter into prostitution

    A homeless Romanian woman has been arrested in Sicily for forcing her 13-year-old daughter into prostitution, in return for which she would obtain money, cigarettes, drinks, the use of a shower or a place to sleep.

    In a statement, Italian police said they also apprehended four men who sexually abused the teenager, including a 90-year-old.

    “They will all face rape charges as the age of consent in Italy is 14,’’ police said.

    They said that the events took place in the south-eastern province of Ragusa, where the girl worked illegally in greenhouse plantations.

    Officers discovered the alleged sex crimes while investigating cases of rural labour exploitation.

    According to police, she used to have sex with fellow land workers from Italy, Romania or North Africa, either on the fields or in abandoned houses.

    Otherwise, older men would abuse her in return for hospitality for her and her mother.

    “Instead of protecting her daughter, the mother would exploit her receiving in return sums of money or other benefits such as wine, beer, cigarettes, the use of a shower or a home where to sleep,’’ police said.

  • CNN uncovers Paris park where Nigerian women forcefully engage in prostitution (Video)

    CNN uncovers Paris park where Nigerian women forcefully engage in prostitution (Video)

    The Bois de Vincennes, a sprawling park on the outskirts of eastern Paris, is home to horse riding schools and a zoo which has also been part-commandeered by human traffickers and sex slaves.
    The sex slaves are brought from various African countries, but 80 percent of whom are Nigerian women who are made to stand by the park, waiting for customers.
    The women who have no identity and means of escaping their predicament for several reasons, return the money they made to their traffickers at the end of the day.
    9 out of 10 women in the park are not free women, belonging to a network of human traffickers.
    It was gathered that selling sex is reportedly not a crime in Paris but buying is. Hence, these women freely line the streets in very revealing outfits, waiting for men who need their services.
    When prison police were asked how this could be allowed to continue, they told CNN there simply isn’t very much they can do, adding that the women are afraid to talk to them because of the networks and they say they’re moved around Europe very often.

  • Eight suspected human traffickers arrested in Benin

    The Benin Zonal Command of the National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons has arrested eight suspected human traffickers.

    The Zonal Commander, Mr Nduka Nwanwenne, told the News A in Benin on Wednesday that the traffickers were arrested in the past three months.

    He said that a total of 138 people were rescued by the agency within the period and that 124 of the trafficked people were already reunited with their families.

    Nwanwanne said that 89 cases of trafficking were currently pending in various courts in the zone.

    He said that 34 cases were reported to the agency through petitions, while 14 others were received from sister security agencies.

    Nwanwenne said that in spite of the renewed and drastic measures put in place by government and traditional institutions to stop human trafficking, some people were still adamant on doing the business.

    He said that the Edo Government had, however, intensified awareness campaigns against human trafficking to stop the business.

    Nwanwenne commended the Benin monarch, Oba Ewuare II and his palace on the recent step they had taken against human traffickers.

  • Prophet who allegedly kidnapped a lady and turned her into a prostitute arrested

    Prophet who allegedly kidnapped a lady and turned her into a prostitute arrested

    Enyeribe Nkwocha has been arrested for allegedly abducting a woman, Sandra, and turning her into a prostitute.

    The Ndiegoro police division in Aba, Abia state made the arrest after the woman made a complain to the police. Sandra said that the man, who is a man of God, told her that God wants to use her for missionary work.

    She said:“He told me that God said he should use me for missionary work and that he will be saving any money I will make from preaching in his friend’s account and he will use it to build a church for me because he saw that I have the gift of prophecy.”

    “He said God told him I should not marry and have children; whenever a man wants to marry me, he will ask me to forget about him. He has been taking me from one hotel to the other and using me to make money.”

    “He made me to forget about my family since then. I believe he used charm on me because he forced me to swear to an oath with him right inside the taxi when he kidnapped me. So I stopped communicating with my parents.”

    “But last Christmas, he collected N20, 000 from me, making it about N100, 000 I have given him. After some days, I started realizing myself and asked him if the money I had been giving him was not enough to build the church he promised to build for me.”

    “He then told to go back to my family. But he warned me not to tell them about the gift of prophecy he told me about and that if I did, they would poison me. That was how I started thinking about how my family members would poison me and then I regained my consciousness.”

    The suspect, however, denied the allegations and claimed that the lady is his girlfriend and she made the accusations because they were having problems.

    He said: “She is my girlfriend that I met in Bayelsa State. At a time, I wanted to get married to her but she refused to marry me. So, I married another woman and I didn’t tell her that I got married.”

    When she found out that I was married, she got offended; that was what caused the problem we are having now.”

    The state’s commissioner of police, Adeleye Oyebade, confirmed the arrest of the suspect.