Police, brothel make millions as child prostitution, sex trafficking reign in Osun communities – Newstrends
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Police, brothel make millions as child prostitution, sex trafficking reign in Osun communities

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In this undercover investigation, our reporter, Sikiru Obarayese, exposed how security operatives abet child prostitution, trafficking and make millions of Naira from the illegal activities in Osun communities.

Sometime in early 2021, a 17-year-old girl, Victoria, who came from Southern Nigeria, followed a boyfriend to an Osun community in search of a greener pasture. After she was maltreated and sent out to the street by her boyfriend, the teenager met a young woman in an Osun community offering her “woman’s job” with no further explanation about the offer.

Victoria was later invited to Ilesa by a young lady identified as Precious where she would start the “woman’s job” — Vitoria had told Precious, who claimed she is 22-year-old, about her inability to gather fare from Osogbo to Ilesa, in which the lady promised to settle the fare after meeting her at a park.

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In another conversation with Precious among several discussions they had; Victoria, who is an undercover agent, asked again to reaffirm if being a 17-year-old old girl – an underage – would not be a problem. The young lady acknowledged her age and gave her the green light to meet her at a roundabout, near a motor park in Ilesa.

Victoria eventually met with Precious who is a sex worker at Frayo, Itishin area in Ilesa. The brothel is one of the few with high numbers of underage girls trafficked from eastern and northern parts of the country.

Child trafficking, according to the United Nations Organization, refers to the recruitment, harbouring, transportation, provision, obtaining, patronizing, or soliciting of a minor for the purpose of exploitation, forced labour, slavery and commercial sex act.

Sex trafficking on the other hand is human trafficking for the purpose of sexual exploitation, including sexual slavery, which is considered a form of modern slavery.

Young sex worker identified as Precious

Though there is no law against prostitution in Nigeria about age or consent, but according to the UN, it is illegal when someone is harbouring, transporting for the purpose of exploitation, or forced labour for commercial purposes.

Meanwhile, security operatives in Osun community have been exploiting and benefitting from the sexual escapades of the little girls. Sources told our reporter that police makes millions of Naira weekly from aiding the act.

Impeccable sources confirmed that security operatives make at least N1.4 million monthly from a brothel in Ilesa alone in their involvement – complicit – taking bribes.

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These operatives are in cahoots with the owners of the brothel, thereby exploiting, harbouring and obtaining from sex workers.

According to DAILY POST findings, the brothels, especially Frayo, have huge patronage due to the high number of underage girls. The owner of the brothel popularly call by the name of the brothel (Frayo), makes about one Million Naira weekly from the girls.

The sex economy

The two brothels under investigation were mixed with aged women and young girls, some of whom are underage. A source who is very familiar with the business said the girls have been trained. “The girls have been trained to lie and they are good at what they do,” the source said.

Frayo has over 50 rooms – all partitioned with iron panes. The owner of the facility, it was uncovered, slammed cruel punishment on any of the occupants that goes against the rules.

It was also revealed that the owner of the brothel runs the place alongside his mother – the mother who monitors the movement and activities of the ladies.

“We cannot go outside to buy what his mother sells. Though her things are expensive, her price is three times higher than the normal price, even with that, anybody caught buying things outside will be fined. The fine is always monetary,” a sex worker lamented.

Many of the girls living in the brothels said they face different challenges. None of the girls are allowed to raise the alarm or create any scene. “We all face our own businesses. Everyone has been careful here and afraid of being caught in anything that will make (Oga) Frayo lock your door,” another sex worker revealed.

One of the underage girls said, “I have been fined N50,000 before and I begged him (Frayo) for everything. They will lock your room if you commit any offence. I didn’t work for about a week until I paid him N37,000 with several pleas.”

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Further findings revealed that each sex worker makes a return of N2,500 to the brothel which adds up to N125,000 daily with the calculation of 50 rooms, 875,000 weekly and N3, 750,000 monthly.

A security source told this medium that those brothels would not have been functional without the backing of security operatives, adding that there is a high possibility of involving in other illicit activities such as baby factories and harbouring criminal elements.

The crux of child prostitution & trafficking

“I am too young to be doing this job, that’s why police come to collect money from us every week in order to protect us from being arrested,” said Doris*, an underage sex worker in Osun metropolis, Southwest Nigeria.

She was trafficked from Kwande Local Government in Benue State to a brothel, named “Frayo” in Ilesa, Osun State in August 2021, by her aunt who is also into the same ‘business’.

As a young sex worker, Doris gets more patronage and bid higher from her customers than the older ones. She has a “mother” which is her aunt from her maternal family.

“Mother” in the brothels are benefactor or “guiding angel” — they are those who brought in individuals. Every daughter contributes their daily earnings to their mother while they also pay dues including “Police money” through their mother to the owner of the brothel who will remit to the police.

According to our findings, many of the girls living in the brothel are from Benue, Abia and Cross Rivers States. Some were brought to the brothel by a family member – sisters or relatives.

It was gathered that there are ‘cuts’ for the person who brings any girl in. Doris (not real name) who was brought in by her aunt said, she delivers N5000 for daily returns while others make N2,500 return to the brothel.

Doris further revealed that she pays N17,000 for security while others pay N7,000, through her aunt who is also a sex worker in the brothel.

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Her aunt promised her that she would work for two weeks but changed the agreement that she would have to stay till December. Findings show that Doris’ aunt is exploiting her against the earlier arrangement.

No one could take Doris out of the brothel without her knowledge. She sometimes helped her to bargain on price. “I know how much she gives me daily. She is young and new here so people like her,” her sister said.

Cash For Complicity

Sex workers at Adams brothel in Ilesa

Further investigation revealed that sex workers are confident and certain that nothing can happen to them. With their relationship with the security operatives, the sex workers are sure of constant cover.

Some of them told this reporter that every Friday is ‘police payment day’ while everyone could have contributed N5000 to their bosses – the money which was increased to 7,000 this year.

“Police don’t arrest us because we pay them weekly. Initially, we paid N5000 but it has just been increased to N7,000 recently. There are over 50 rooms in this place and we make a huge amount of money.”

According to findings, the sex workers make payments to the police through the owner of the brothel. “We have the full support of the police. Oga calls them here if anybody or customer is trying to do anything funny.”

This, according to our findings, shows that police are aware of what is going on in the brothels and as well aiding it.

Corruption, a catalyst for human trafficking in Nigeria – foreign report

Internal trafficking is prevalent with Nigerian perpetrators recruiting victims from rural areas, especially the country’s southern regions, for exploitation in commercial sex and forced labour in domestic work in cities such as Abeokuta, Calabar, Ibadan, Kaduna, Kano, Lagos, and Port Harcourt.

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Traffickers – including some community members – exploit women and girls in domestic service and sex trafficking, as well as boys in forced and bonded labour in street vending, domestic service, artisanal mining, stone quarrying, agriculture, textile manufacturing, alms- begging, and in the tie-dye sector in the northwest and southwest of the country.

Nigeria Police Force has been previously accused of exploiting women in illicit activities. According to a US report on trafficking, “Unlike previous years, NPF reported its officers, arrested two traffickers in 2020, and media noted NPF officers arrested three suspected traffickers exploiting women in “baby factories,” as well as additional potential victims in December 2020 and March 2021 in Ogun and Katsina states respectively.

”Corruption affects all levels of government – including the judiciary, security forces, and law enforcement agencies – and undermines accountability for trafficking offences. Sex trafficking, according to the report occurs in government-run detention centres and IDP camps. “Without providing statistics, observers reported NAPTIP investigated allegations of human trafficking in IDP camps, in coordination with the Ministry of Defense zonal commanders.”

Young sex worker seducing a man

“…“Baby factories” refer to criminal enterprises often disguised as orphanages, maternity homes, or religious centres – where traffickers hold women against their will, rape them, and force them to carry and deliver a child. Experts stated this illicit activity was widespread in the country,” a United States of America special report on trafficking stated.

United States of America Department of State 2021 report from monitor and Combat trafficking in persons said the government has not met the minimum standards in several key areas fighting trafficking in the country. The US report declared corruption a significant concern in battling the crime in Nigeria.

The US department recommended to the National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP) and Nigeria Police Force (NPF) enhanced coordination on law enforcement efforts – including investigating illicit centres exploiting women in forced surrogacy – and prosecute suspects while respecting the rights of the accused.

Policemen from unidentified stations come to the brothel to raid — Police

Contacting the Spokesperson of Osun Police command, SP Yemisi Opalola, she said that the DPOs Ilesa denied the allegations. She further disclosed that the DPO of Ijamo divisional police station informed her that some policemen from different parts of the state come to the particular brothels to raid the place.

Opalola confirmed that the command made different arrests of some hardened criminals in the particular brothels investigated by DAILY POST, promising that further investigation could be conducted.

“I contacted the DPOs, they said they are not aware of the allegations, that further investigation will be conducted through their men. The Ijamo DPO affirmed that they have arrested some hardened criminals before at the brothels. Likewise, some policemen from Osogbo and other unidentified stations also go there to raid.

“The command will definitely investigate further because it is unusual.”

We will investigate this — NAPTIP reacts

The zonal coordinator of NAPTIP in Osun State, Mustapha Saadu said the agency will carry out an investigation on the brothels. He added that the command had not heard about the said brothels or their activities.

Meanwhile, the head of the investigation of the agency in the zone who was in the same room with the coordinator during the visit of this reporter to NAPTIP office in Osogbo acknowledged the “police money”.

Daily Post

 

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Yuletide: Travellers want fare discount for road trips

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Yuletide: Travellers want fare discount for road trips

  • Bemoan high fares

Passengers travelling to their country homes for the Christmas and new year day celebrations have urged the Federal Government to extend the free rail services announced early in the week to road transport routes across the country.

Some of the travellers who complained about the high fares called on the Federal Government to restore the 50 percent fare reduction on inter-state luxury bus routes granted to road passengers at this time last year.

The passengers who spoke at various terminals and loading stations of long distance road transport companies in Lagos, were reacting to the upsurge in fares to about N40,000 on luxury buses and N65,000 on mini buses going to the South-East.

Reports from some of the boarding stations revealed that upon hearing the announcement of free train ride, some passengers thronged the loading stations at various points in Lagos to benefit from the gesture, but were disappointed when they were informed that the offer did not cover road transport.

At Terminal 1 in Oshodi, Alafia, Jibowu, Mazamaza, and private stations in the Cele/Ejigbo axis, on Saturday, passengers bemoaned the high cost of travelling on both the big and small buses, disclosing that many people were not travelling because they couldn’t afford “the exorbitant fares the transport firms are collecting.”

Interestingly, a trip on board Toyota Sienna which used to attract slightly higher fare than on a typical mini bus, is the same at N40,500.

One of the passengers told our reporter one if the stations in Cele, “You press people should please tell (President Bola) Tinubu that poor masses cannot afford to go home this Christmas because there is no money in the country.

“(President) Tinubu should please repeat the 50 percent discount on long distance fares which some of us enjoyed last year to travel home.”

At the nearby Young Young Shall Grow station, a passenger who planned to travel to the east recalled how he took advantage of the 50 percent fare discount to travel from Abuja to Onitsha and back in 2023, and wondered why the Federal Government has not considered the re-introduction of the palliative this festive season.

According to the man who gave his name as Chinedu Uzoechina, his intention to travel to Anambra state and back with his wife and five children, has been stalled by the high transport fares being charged at the various terminals.

Uzoechina, who came to book for seats in advance, lamented, “I was hoping that the 50 percent fare discount that followed the increase in fuel pump price would be available this year, but that has not been the case this year. Forty thousand into seven is N280,000 for one-way luxury tickets.

“If you add the cost of coming back, it means I will spend nothing less than N560,000 on transportation alone for seven of us. Where will I get that kind of money? I have called my wife to inform her of the situation here (at the terminals in Cele).

“She is not happy that we are not travelling anymore, but what can I do?”

According to him, the only thing that can make his family travel again is if the Federal Government extends the free train ride offer to long distance road transport routes, like Lagos-east, or reduces the fares in collaboration with the operators.

Like Uzoechina, many other intending travellers were still hopeful that the government wiuld still intervene with a fare discount, even as they disclosed that they would either cancel the trips outrightly or reduce the number of tickets to be bought, if their hopes are dashed.It was learnt that the fares were slightly lower by about N2,000 at Terminal 1 where both big and mini buses have been loading for day and night trips at Oshodi.

Reacting to the passengers’ complaints about high fares at the terminal owned by the Lagos State Government, Damian Ezuma, the manager of Izu Chukwu Transport, blamed the situation on the rising cost of maintaining the buses as well as on the pump price of diesel, which he said, is as high as N2,000 a litre in some parts of the country.

“It is not our fault. The cost of maintenance is so high that it is only by the grace of God that some of transport companies still manage to keep their buses on the road these days. Do you know that one big bus tyre costs between N250,000 and N500,000, depending on the quality and brand?” Ezuma argued.

He confirmed that many intending travellers who heard about the free train services offer by the Federal Government have been coming to the terminal make enquiries on whether long distance-plying buses are part of the gesture and whether last season’s fare discount applies this year.

Many of them leave the terminal disappointed and deciding not to travel anymore, but opting instead to wait for a possible fare palliative from the government.

Also commenting on the reason for the high fares, a manager at Chisco Transport’s head office in Lagos explained that the unfavourable naira-dollar exchange rate has impacted on the prices of replacement parts and maintenance costs generally.

But a major factor is the fact that during the peak festive season, buses are usually full when leaving major cities like Lagos and Abuja, but are almost empty in their return journeys.

So some operators slightly adjust their fares upward to cover the losses incurred during return trips.

In 2023, the special fare discount by government through the luxury bus owners took effect on December 21, and lasted till the second week of January, 2024.

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Navy arrests 19 Nigerians attempting to reach Europe by hiding on ship

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Navy arrests 19 Nigerians attempting to reach Europe by hiding on ship

The Nigerian Navy Ship (NNS) BEECROFT has successfully apprehended 19 individuals attempting to stow away on Europe-bound vessels.

In a statement issued on Saturday in Lagos, the ship’s Information Officer, Lt. Hussaini Ibrahim, disclosed that 15 stowaways were intercepted on Dec. 19 aboard the European-bound Moto Tanker (MT) KRITI RUBY. Another four were caught on Dec. 21 aboard MT MCC YANBU.

“Preliminary investigation revealed that the stowaways boarded the vessels at night and concealed themselves in the rudder compartment while attempting to illegally migrate to Europe,” Ibrahim stated.

The Navy’s Quick Response Team (QRT), operating from ATLAS COVE and using the Falcon Eye Alignment under the Nigerian Navy Maritime Domain Awareness Facility, facilitated the interception of the 15 individuals near the Lagos fairway buoy.

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Ibrahim further explained that credible intelligence led to the interception of the additional four stowaways by Navy personnel deployed on escort duties aboard the vessel.

“The prompt response of the QRT saved the stowaways from exposure to life-threatening situations during the long voyage,” he added.

The first group of 15 individuals has been handed over to the Nigeria Immigration Service, Lagos State Port/Marine Command, Apapa, for further investigation and necessary action. The remaining four suspects will also be transferred in due course.

“The presence of stowaways poses serious security threats to maritime operations, including risks of smuggling, piracy, drug and human trafficking, among other maritime crimes,” Ibrahim noted.

He emphasized that under the leadership of Chief of Naval Staff Vice Adm. Emmanuel Ogalla, NNS BEECROFT will continue maintaining security along Lagos waterways and surrounding creeks to support safe maritime activities and economic growth.

 

Navy arrests 19 Nigerians attempting to reach Europe by hiding on ship

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Troops arrest four Ambazonian rebels in Taraba

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Nigerian military troops

Troops arrest four Ambazonian rebels in Taraba

Troops of the 6 Brigade Nigerian Army/Sector 3 of the Operation Whirl Stroke (OPWS), have arrested four suspected members of Ambazonian rebels in Taraba.

The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Ambazonia is a rebel group operating in neighbouring Cameroon Republic.

A statement on Saturday in Jalingo by Capt. Olubodunde Oni, Acting Assistant Director Army Public Relations, said the suspects were arrested at a hotel in Takum town.

The statement said that acting on credible intelligence, the suspects were tracked and apprehended.

According to the statement, during initial interrogation, the suspects confessed to being part of the rebel group involved in arms proliferation in exchange for cocoa with their Nigerian collaborators.

It said that four mobile handsets were recovered from the suspects now in detention undergoing further investigation.

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The statement also said that in another operation following actionable intelligence, troops deployed at Natilde community in Bantaji District of Wukari Local Government Area intercepted a truck with registration number WKR 66 BB, transporting 19 pieces of stolen pipelines belonging to the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation Limited (NNPCL).

It said that further collaborative efforts with the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) in Wukari Division led to the recovery of an additional 11 pipes, bringing the total to 30.

“The recovered items have been handed over to the NSCDC Wukari Division for further investigation and necessary action.

“The 6 Brigade Nigerian Army will remain resolute in its commitment to safeguarding lives and property while ensuring the security of critical national infrastructure.

“We urge members of the public to continue providing timely and credible information to security agencies to enhance our collective efforts in maintaining peace and security,” the statement added.

 

Troops arrest four Ambazonian rebels in Taraba

(NAN)

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