Two teenage Nigerian girls, Rejoice Chioma Israel, 16, (centre)
and Rosemary Uchenna Emmanuel, 19 (right), who were trafficked to Burkina Faso
to become sex workers in the country have been rescued, PM News reports.
The two girls left Nigeria on 11 July with a man who promised to take them to Malaysia via Burkina Faso for a better life. The trafficker explained to them that they will be given fresh passports and some vaccines in Burkina Faso before proceeding to Malaysia for well paid jobs.But once in Ouagadugu, the capital of Burkina Faso, they were handed over to a Nigerian woman called Onome who introduced them to prostitution. Continue..
They refused and explained they were on their way to Malaysia and
were just making a brief stop in Burkina Faso for new passports and
vaccines.
“She invited bad boys to take us away to a village on
motorcycles,” Rosemary said.
It was at that time they were rescued by some people who called an
anti-human trafficking NGO founded by a Nigerian and known in French as
Association Nationale de Lutte Contre le Traffic des Jeunes or the National
Association Against Trafficking of Young Persons (Lutra – Jeunes).
During the rescue operation, Rosemary said, she was pushed off the
bike and sustained injury in her right hand and right leg.
Before embarking on the journey, Rosemary and Rejoice worked at a
small restaurant in Port Harcourt away from their families in Imo and Abia
States.
They lived together and worked at the same restaurant where they
earned about N3,000 a month.
They were there for some months until one day, a man visited the
restaurant and told them about the well paid new jobs in Malaysia.
They contributed only N5,000 each and were handed over to the
man’s brother who took them on the journey. The journey from Port Harcourt to
Burkina Faso lasted about two days.
They were then handed over to the Nigerian woman there who manages
at least 30 other Nigerian girls with some as young as 14 years old.
“They were deceived and trafficked from Nigeria with the hope to
secure manual work in Malaysia to better their future,” said Ochuko Patrick
Otoba (pictured left), a Nigerian and President of Lutra-Jeunes, the NGO that
rescued them and brought them back to Nigeria on Monday after two days on the
road.
“But they were surprised to find themselves in Burkina Faso,
forced to take up prostitution as they new trade. When they refused, they were
maltreated and beaten up with injury of irreparable degree,” he said.
Otoba, a human rights activist, said the number of Nigerian girls
who have become victims of human trafficking across the borders of West African
countries, especially Nigeria, Benin, Togo and Burkina Faso is on the
rise.
“Enslaved, indebted, sold like donkeys, the young victims are
between the ages of 14 to 22 and they are deceived by traffickers in Nigeria
who are also Nigerians,” he said.
He called on the Nigerian government to embark on serious
awareness campaign, rescue other victims in Burkina Faso, build rehabilitation
centres to house these victims and begin empowerment projects for rescued
victims who are not educated but need skills to get back into the society.
His own NGO, he said, has not received funding from the
government, and had been struggling to cope.
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