Nigeria’s
porous border with its northern neighbour Niger is being exploited by
traffickers smuggling teenage girls to Europe where they will work as
prostitutes, immigration officials told IRIN.
“Our 910
kilometre boundary with Niger is too much for us to police which
provides human traffickers an advantage to conduct their trade of
smuggling young girls to Europe for prostitution,” Oemi Bio Ockiya,
head of the Nigerian immigration department in Kano told IRIN.
Ockiya
said girls are transported from the southern part of Nigeria to Kano
from where they are driven to Libya through Niger and then shipped to
Europe, their final destination, for prostitution.
The
traffickers convince the girls and their parents that lucrative jobs
await their victims, but force them into prostitution once in Europe by
holding on to their passports.
The trafficking of young women
to Europe through Kano has been a common occurrence. Hitherto the
traffickers would smuggle their victims through Kano airport using fake
and stolen passports.
However the introduction of
state-of-the-art passport reading machines and a run of high-profile
arrests meant the traffickers resorted to driving the victims overland
to Niger then Libya from where they are shipped to Europe, Ockiya said.
On May 12 immigration officials in Kano apprehended Samuel
Osagie, a Nigerian national residing in Libya with 21 victims, 16 of
them teenage girls, at a motor park in the city. He was apparently
bound for Libya.
The girls, who are from four southern
Nigerian states Edo, Akwa Ibom, Anambra and Delta, told the officials
that Osagie arranged with their parents to take them to Libya to work
as maids for US$1,272 fees each, which they would pay in instalments
from their wages.
“The work promise is a ruse. The truth of
the matter is that they were going to pay the fees from the money they
would make from prostitution in Europe,” Ockiya said.
Ahmed
Bello, head of the federally-funded National Agency for the Prohibition
of Traffic in Persons [NAPTIP] in charge of 18 northern states said
trafficking is also spreading HIV/AIDS.
“Our investigation
shows that 40 percent of trafficked girls repatriated to Nigeria test
positive to HIV and this has serious social and economic implications,”
he said.
A Niger official who asked to remain anonymous as he
was speaking on a sensitive subject without authorisation said tackling
trafficking is testing both countries.
“This is an issue that
has to be tackled collectively. Nigeria and Niger conduct joint
trans-border patrols to check criminal activities along the boundary
but the length of the border is too much for us.”
“Nigeria has
more resources and personnel than Niger and if it is finding it
difficult to police its side of the border you can imagine how much
more difficult it is for Niger to effectively shut its side of the
border against human traffickers,” the official added.
Ockiya
agreed limited manpower and inadequate logistics make effective
policing of the long border impossible. He said the border patrol
agencies would need helicopters and cars to help match the wealthy,
sophisticated smugglers.
Mairo Bello, head of Kano-based
Adolescent Health Information Project [AHIP], said that the authorities
on both sides of the border are fighting an enemy far more
sophisticated than them.
“The more the authorities devise new
strategies, the more sophisticated the traffickers become in running
their trade,” he said.