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| Sex-in-Europe |
Trafficking for prostitution into Europe
by Nigerians has reached a tipping point. In a newly-released report,
the United Nations International Organisation for Migration warns that
the trafficking of Nigerian women for prostitution is at a “crisis
level.” The report, which covers the first six months of 2016, laments
that gullible Nigerian girls – some with the help of their families –
are being recruited at an increasing rate by criminal gangs for European
sex markets. This is alarming; it is embarrassing for the nation.
The IOM investigation found that
criminal gangs were exploiting the migration crisis in the Middle East
to smuggle Nigerian girls into their sex slavery networks in Europe. It
says that the pimps dangle tales of prosperity before the girls and
their families, and convey them through migrant camps spread across West
Africa. From there, they land in war-torn Libya, where they repeatedly
suffer gross abuse. Eventually, they are taken to Europe. In reality,
they are being sold for between £4,000 and £10,000, ending up there with
debts of up to £40,000 that they have to repay by engaging in
prostitution. This is a high-wire game of deception, which should be
brought to an end.
Apart from being subjected to abuse,
some die on the tortuous journey. Their major destinations are Britain,
Spain and, especially, Italy. A flourishing sex trade has been in
existence for decades between Nigeria and Italy, but now there is a
sharp increase, with Delta and Edo states reportedly heavily involved.
IOM officials say “Edo is the hub” of trafficking in Nigeria. It behoves
the two state governments to act, and launch aggressive campaigns to
dissuade prospective preys.
According to the IOM, 3,600 Nigerian
women reached Italy between January and June, nearly four times the
figure for 2014, and double the figure in the first half of 2015. At
this rate, the final tally for 2016 might surpass the 5,633 recorded in
2015. “What we have seen this year is a crisis, it is absolutely
unprecedented and is the most significant increase in the number of
Nigerian women arriving in Italy for 10 years,” says Simona Moscarelli,
anti-trafficking expert at the IOM. “Our indicators are the majority of
these women are being deliberately brought in for sexual exploitation
purposes.”
The situation is equally terrible in
Britain. Kevin Hyland, head of the United Kingdom Anti-Slavery
Commission, says Nigerians constitute the majority of the 13,000 modern
slaves there. “The rise in the numbers is staggering. Nigerian women and
girls are enslaved and sexually exploited here in the UK,” Hyland says.
His lamentation resonates with Nigerians. Even at home, prostitution,
described as the “world’s oldest profession,” presents a long-standing
conundrum. In spite of the seemingly official unwillingness to admit the
magnitude of the problem, prostitution is deep-rooted in our
communities.
While some of the teenagers are being
lured into this depraved life, there are many women who willingly
subject themselves to such indignity on the grounds that they want to
make ends meet. Their predicament is being blamed on the worsening
economic condition. As a result, they dive headlong into prostitution.
This is an infantile dream, a hoax being perpetrated by vicious
manipulators.
In truth, most of the filthy lucre being
made in the global sex trade is being shared by the vicious criminal
operators. In Britain, the Office for National Statistics’ computation
in 2009 – the first time prostitution income was factored into the GDP –
arrived at a figure of £5.3 billion a year. The latest figure from a
research by Urban Institute, an American think tank, puts the number of
prostitutes worldwide at 42 million. Urban says the global sex trade
generates $186 billion, with criminals living large off the proceeds of a
trade that is still an offence in many parts of the world. According to
TheRichest.com, prostitution is one of the largest and most profitable industries in the United States for criminal gangs.
So, what to do? First, strengthen the
National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons, the
Nigerian Immigration Service and other border agencies. The government
has to infiltrate the sex network groups smuggling girls out of Nigeria.
The routes might be many, but the government agents should familiarise
themselves with them and curb the activities of the human traffickers
before they leave our shores. It is a huge task that will need modern
technology, intelligence and information, but the government should not
succumb to the gangs profiting from the illicit trade.
NAPTIP is making slow strides. It has to
make examples of suspects by prosecuting them and deterring others. For
instance, a new law in France imposes a fine of $4,000 on those
soliciting sex from prostitutes. In some jurisdictions, prostitution is
punishable by a fine, and it is said to be illegal in 109 countries.
However, the law alone cannot tackle the scourge. The internet age has
even made it more difficult for the law to achieve its aim. Instead of
walking the streets in search of customers, sex workers now use online
media to negotiate with clients. This way, they evade the long arm of
the law.
To redress the dilemma, several
countries are adopting the Nordic Model, which was pioneered by Sweden
in 1999. The model makes it a crime for the buyer of sex only, not the
seller. Iceland, Canada, Norway and Northern Ireland are in this
category, while prostitution is highly-regulated in The Netherlands,
Poland and Austria. In Switzerland, sex workers must register, undergo
mandatory weekly health check-ups and obtain a certificate.
Our government has to do more to
sensitise the populace about the dangers of prostitution. We need to put
our girls in school and establish programmes that can wean them off the
streets. The state governments concerned should establish their own
anti-human trafficking agencies, while NGOs should join the crusade in
earnest through incentives and well-defined programmes.
By the Punch Editorial Board




