Tag: baby factory

  • Delta police smash ‘baby factory’

    Operatives of the Delta State Police Command have arrested a commercial bus driver and an estate agent for allegedly operating a ‘baby factory’ and child abduction.

    The suspects, identified as Jennifer Obi and Osita Okafor, were arrested along with seven girls.

    Six of the girls, according to the police, are currently pregnant.

    The suspects, who were paraded in Asaba, the capital of Delta State, denied the allegations. They claimed to have been arrested at a maternity home where they were receiving treatment from a midwife.

    The spokesman of the state’s police command, Celestina Kalu, a Superintendent of Police(SP) said: “One Blessing Aondoseer ‘f’ of Ominigboma camp reported at the ‘B’ Division Police station that sometimes in September 2016, her husband, one Telengu ‘m’ (surname unknown) brought her to Asaba with pregnancy for delivery. And that after delivering a baby boy, her husband, Jennifer Obi and two others took away her two-weeks-old baby to an unknown destination.”

    “Detectives swung into action and arrested Jennifer Obi and Osita Okafor. Seven other girls, out of which six are pregnant namely: Joy Chinwendu, Amaka Emeka Joy, Deborah Ogbonna, Ifunanya Agu, Chinecherem Agbo, Ogochukwu Okwe and Chioma Emmanuel were also arrested in the house of Osita Okafor at Oduke area, Asaba. The six pregnant girls confessed that they were there to sell their babies after delivery.”

    But Okafor denied the allegations, claiming that all suspects were arrested at his wife’s maternity home.

    He said that his wife had been away for about three months and that the pregnant girls came regularly for treatment.

    He added that the complainant raised the alarm after she was duped by her husband who collected the money for the ‘stolen child’ and disappeared.

    He claimed the complainant was given a paltry N2, 000 after which she raised the alarm.

    He said: “I am Osita Okafor, a bus driver in Asaba. My wife is a midwife. All these girls came for treatment before they were arrested. This complainant and her husband sold their baby. Her husband ran away with the money and gave her just N2, 000, and that is why the girl reported at the police station. The local vigilant moved in following the alarm she raised.”

    The 40-year-old bus driver and father-of-three denied being a member of the syndicate, adding that he was getting ready for work when he was arrested. The other accused person, Obi, denied her involvement in the alleged crime.

    She said that as an estate agent, she was doing her job, adding that she found a room for the complainant and her husband. According to her, on the day they went to look for a room, she observed that the complainant experienced labour pains and she assisted her to get to a maternity home.

    The leader of the Tiv community in Asaba, Paul Tyokase Ngutur, who acted as interpreter for the complainant, said that Blessing Aondoseer was married to another man who impregnated her in Mbausu community. But because he had no money for the welfare of his pregnant wife, he returned her to her parents only to discover that her parents were separated.

    According to him, Blessing’s mother, who did not know what to do with her pregnant daughter was approached by Telengu, who promised to marry her and subsequently brought her to Asaba only to sell the two-weeks-old baby upon delivery and disappeared.

    He said Blessing and her husband Telengu hails from  Mbausu community, Vandekya Local Government Area of Benue State.

    He said investigation revealed that the fleeing Telengu had commenced the building of his home in Benue from the proceeds of child sale.

     

  • Ondo baby factory: Court adjourns suit till July 7

    he Federal High Court sitting in Akure, the Ondo State capital, yesterday adjourned to July 7,the case involving a couple arrested in Ilutitun-Osooro, Okitipupa Local Government Area for allegedly running a baby factory in the community.

    The case, which was initially being handled by Justice Isaq Sani came up before a new judge, Justice F.A Olubanjo following the transfer of the former from the Federal High Court, Akure.

    The accused couple, Prince Abiodun and Happiness Ogundeji were arrested in January 2014 by men of the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS) and handed over to the National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP).

    The case has been in court since February 2014 over illegal detention of pregnant teenage girls, whose babies, according to sources, were often sold at birth.

    Following investigations and findings by NAPTIP, the accused persons are now facing 10-point count for unlawful custody of the victims against their wish.

    They were also charged for illegally enticing the girls away and depriving them of their parents and guardians.

    The action is said to have contravened section 19 sub section C and E of the trafficking in persons(prohibition)Law Enforcement and Administration Act 2003 as amended in 2005.

    The case was adjourned in response to a prayer by the defendants’ counsel, Bola Alabi, for more time to study the amended charges.

    This came after a directive to the prosecuting counsel that the amended 10-count be read to the hearing of the defendants.

    Counsel to the defendant requested if the defendants had been served.

    Consequent upon the confirmation by the prosecuting lawyer that one of the defendants’ counsel, Chuma Oguejiofor, had been served through a law firm, Dele Kuboye & Co, Justice Olubanjo directed the court clerk to make copies of the charge and stood the case down to allow the defendants to be served in person.

    The judge warned the defendants’ counsel against using unnecessary technicalities as delay tactics.

    Justice Olubanjo said she would not want to deny the counsel ample opportunity to defend their clients, but urged that the culture of speedy administration of justice be applied.

    She, therefore, adjourned the case to July 7 for plea and applications on the case, while the defendant’s counsel were given seven days within which they should serve the prosecuting counsel.

  • Ondo Baby Factory: Court adjourns suit to July 7

    The Federal High Court sitting in Akure, the Ondo state capital Wednesday adjourned to July 7, the case involving a couple arrested in Ilutitun-Osooro, Okitipupa local government on January 2014 for allegedly running a baby factory in the community.

    The case which was initially presided over by Justice Isaq Sani came up before a new Judge, Justice F.A Olubanjo following the transfer of the former from the Federal High Court, Akure.

    The accused couple, Prince Abiodun and Happiness Ogundeji were arrested by men of the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS) and handed over to the National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking In Persons (NAPTIP).

    The case has been in Court since February 2014 for prosecution over illegal detention of pregnant teenage girls whose babies, according to sources are often sold at birth.

    Following investigations and findings by NAPTIP, the accused persons are now facing 10-point count charge for unlawful custody of the victims against their wish and for illegally enticing them away as well as depriving them of their parents and guardians.

    The action is said to have contravened section 19, sub section C and E of the trafficking in persons (prohibition) Law Enforcement and Administration Act 2003 as amended in 2005.

    The case was adjourned in response to a prayer by the defendent’s Counsel, Bola Alabi for more time to study the amended charges as being new in the case.

    This came after an earlier directive to the prosecuting Counsel that the amended 10-count charge be read to the hearing of the defendants.

    Responding to the amended charge, counsel to the defendant requested if the defendant had been served.

    Consequent upon the confirmation by the prosecuting lawyer that one of the defendant’s counsel, Chuma Oguejiofor had been served through a law firm, Dele Kuboye & Co, Justice Olubanjo directed the Court Clerk to make copies of the charge and stood the case down to allow the defendants to be served in person.

    The Presiding Judge warned the defendant’s counsel against unnecessary technicalities as delay tactics.

    Justice Olubanjo said she would not want to deny the Counsel ample opportunity to defend their clients,but urged that the culture of speedy administration of Justice be applied.

    She therefore adjourned the case to July 7 for plea and applications on the case, while the defendant’s counsel were given seven days within which they should serve the prosecuting Counsel.

  • Five expectant mothers arrested at Aba ‘baby factory’

    Five expectant mothers arrested at Aba ‘baby factory’

    • Gateman also held

    The Rivers State Polie command has busted a suspected baby factory syndicate in Isi-Alangwa, South Local Government Area of Abia State.

    It arrested five expectant mothers and the gateman to the building said to have been used as the baby factory.

    The suspects were paraded before reporters yesterday in Port Harcourt, the state capital.

    Their arrests followed the alleged abduction of a four-year-old boy, Friday Alioma, and an eight-month-old pregnant Happiness Samuel.

    The victims were allegedly abducted from their homes in Ogbogoro community of Obio/Akpor Local Government Area by four women and taken to the suspected baby factory.

    Happiness admitted that she and other women were in the factory to deliver and sell their babies to the operator of the centre, identified simply as Nma.

    The suspects, aged between 21 and 25 years, said Nma is a doctor running the centre as a baby-selling home.

    But the police have not arrested the suspected operator.

    The women blamed their actions on hardship and rejection by their families and parents.

    The police also arrested a 68-year-old man, John Ndukwe, said to be the gateman to the suspected baby factory.

    Ndukwe admitted that expectant women were admitted and kept in the centre until they were delivered of their babies.

    Corroborating the women’s story, the gateman said the women were discharged from the centre immediately they recovered from their child delivery pains and paid off, depending on the gender of their babies.

    But the suspects did not disclose how much was paid for each of the babies.

    Addressing reporters, five-month pregnant Joy Johnson, from Edo State, said she was expecting as much as N500,000 from the centre after being delivered of her child.

    Police spokesman Ahmad Muhammad, a Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP), who conducted the parade, condemned the act.

    He said the suspects would soon be charged to court while the operator of the factory would be trailed and arrested.

    On how the police busted the suspected baby factory, Muhammad said: “On April 27, (four-year-old) Friday Alioma was reported abducted at Ogbogoro community in Obio/Akpor Local Government Area of Rivers State. The mother, Mrs. Jenny Alioma, reported the matter to the Anti-Kidnap Unit of the police command on May 16.

    “Same day, another person, Friday Samuel, also from the same community, reported that his eight-month pregnant wife, Happiness Samuel, had been abducted and taken to Aba in Abia State.

    “Our discrete investigation linked Nkechi Oguama, from Ugiri in Isiala Mbano Local Government Area of Imo State, in connivance with Ngozi Ogbonna, from Ogbaugwu community in Owerri West and Blessing Izemieze, from Uguta, in Uguta Local Government Area, both in Imo State, as well as Favour Ogbonna, from Abia State, to the alleged kidnap of Friday and Happiness. They have been arrested.

    “On interrogation, the four suspects denied any involvement in the kidnap of Friday but admitted masterminding the movement of Happiness to one woman, identified simply as Nma, the suspected director of a rehabilitation home in Abia State, called Charity and Rehabilitation Centre, at Umuikpe in Isi-Alangwa South Local Government Area.

    “One of the suspects, Ngozi Ogbonna, last Saturday, led a team of policemen from the AKU in Rivers State to the rehabilitation centre where they saw and arrested five expectant mothers, aged between 21 and 25 years.

    “They gave their names as: Ijeoma Ofor, Chiamaka Ikeze, Peace Sunday Mathew, Chinyere Monday and Joy Johnson.

    “Their pregnancies are in various stages. All the women admitted that they were at the centre to be delivered of babies and sell them to the owner of the centre who keeps and takes care of them.

    “We are yet to arrest her, but we are trailing her. We will ensure she is arrested within the shortest possible time.”

     

  • REVEALED: An account of Enugu notorious baby factory

    REVEALED: An account of Enugu notorious baby factory

    Eze, as we’ll call him, is an agent involved in Nigeria’s notorious baby trafficking ring. In a local restaurant in Nigeria’s southeastern city of Enugu, where dozens of people gather every evening to eat the city’s popular goat-meat pepper soup, and where all kinds of gossip can be heard, I overheard him talking to a middle-aged woman about the possibility of getting her a newborn child of any sex she requires.

    I walked up to him after the woman had left, and sought to find out if he truly sells babies.

    “Do you want a baby fresh from the womb?” he asked me.

    He thought I wanted to buy a baby, but in fact I was on a fact-finding mission.

    Eze claimed to be able to get me babies in less than 24 hours. He said that a baby, due to be born in a couple of days, was meant to go to a couple in Sweden but could be mine if I paid the cash in full immediately.

    “We’ll get another baby for this couple. They won’t even notice we’ve given them something else,” he said.

    I then told Eze I wanted to be taken to the factory, to be sure if the business was genuine before saying anything.

    “It wouldn’t work that way,” he said to me. “For security reasons, the women are kept in a hidden place. We don’t want any encounter with the police.”

    When I insisted I needed to see the babies before believing him, Eze said he could only take me to the woman who runs the factory, but with a condition that I paid him 10,000 naira (about $50).

    I was eager to find out how this trade was carried out, so I paid the money, and off we went—driving for about 20 minutes in a cab through slum neighborhoods late at night.

    Eze may be the agent for the business, but he isn’t very familiar with the area where his employer lives. On the two occasions he’s been there, it was under the cover of darkness, he said. He told me his boss deliberately took him to her home at night so he would not recognize the location of the place. That suggests some of the secrecy that shrouds this business.

    On the last part of the trip we were guided by a young boy who knew the woman we were looking for. He soon pointed at a gate, saying, simply, “It’s here”.

    We met Eze’s “Madam,” a middle-aged woman who introduces herself as “Madam Sarah” and asks us to follow her to the sitting room. She bid us have a seat and then turned to me. “Welcome, my son,” she said.

    “I have about six girls in my custody, and they are all heavily pregnant and expecting soon,” she said. “They are not here. I keep them in a secret location.”

    As we were talking, a young man walked in and whispered to her. After he had left, Madam Sarah turned to me and said: “That man is the biological father to many of the children we sell,” apparently to convince me that the babies she sells are not stolen.

    “His job is to get the girls pregnant, and he knows how to get the job done,” she said with a big smile.

    She went on to tell me that she charges 400,000 naira ($2,000) for a girl and 500,000 naira ($2,500) for a boy.

    She talked about the cost of caring for the mothers, justifying the price of the babies. “It’s expensive catering for these girls,” she said. “I give them food and shelter and pay the guys who sleep with them, but I let them go after they have given birth”.

    She claims she can arrange court orders and is able to get children of all ages, genders and complexions, and at any time. The police, she said, are not a problem for her.

    “What sex do you want?” she asked me. “A boy or a girl?”

    “He just came to find out if what I told him about this business was true,” Eze told her. She then turned to me and said: “Now you know it’s real. Come back when you’re ready.”

    I stood up and left, winding my way back to the waiting taxi, having glimpsed up close how the child trade mafia operates in Africa’s most populous country.

    Every year, the Nigerian security operatives discover several new baby factories. Young girls are held captive to give birth to babies who are then sold illegally either to adoptive parents, into slavery, or, it is said, for traditional rituals.

    There are rumors and fears that newborns are being sold to witch doctors for rituals in a country where there is a widespread belief in traditional communities that a powder made of infants brings luck. But, such sensational claims notwithstanding, the vast majority of buyers almost certainly are married couples struggling to conceive.

    A huge amount of the trade is carried out locally in Nigeria, but authorities suspect that babies also have been sold to people from Europe and the United States, and despite the controversy surrounding adoptions in Nigeria, many foreigners continue to seek infants here.

    There are several reasons given for the high patronage of baby factories.

    Security agencies say most places where the illegal baby trade occurs masquerade as non-governmental organizations or charitable homes for marginalized women. Operators of these places present themselves as humanitarians who take care of the pregnant teenagers in need.

    Human trafficking, including selling children, is prohibited under Nigerian law, but almost 10 years ago a UNESCO report on human trafficking in Nigeria identified the business as the country’s third-most common crime behind financial fraud and drug trafficking, and the situation certainly has not improved. At least 10 children are reportedly sold every day across the country.

    The scourge has intensified in the southeast, which is populated mainly by the Igbo ethnic group. Security officials have several ongoing undercover operations targeting suspected baby trafficking rings in Enugu State, underscoring the severity of the problem in this region.

    One measure taken by the government to check the proliferation of baby factories in the state has been to set up a committee on child adoption, and its research has suggested that the incidence of child trafficking and illegal adoptions has been on the rise because some security agencies and unscrupulous state officials aided the baby-sellers.

    “They are now being sold like commodities and, as a responsible government, we cannot allow this to continue to exist in Enugu State,” Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi, governor of Enugu, said while inaugurating the committee last month.

    “While we acknowledge the right and the necessity for the childless or benevolent couples to adopt motherless children and orphans,” the governor declared, “we believe that there is need for strict compliance with due process and the provisions of relevant laws to guarantee the security and well being of the affected children.”

    Eze and Madam Sarah, of course, have other ideas.

    By Philip Obaji Jr.

    Founder of 1 GAME, an advocacy and campaigning organization that fights for the right to education for disadvantaged children in Nigeria, especially in northeastern Nigeria, where Boko Haram forbids western education.

  • Police discover ‘baby factory’ in Delta

    Police discover ‘baby factory’ in Delta

    The Delta State Police Command said yesterday that it had discovered a “baby-production” factory in Asaba, arrested the operator, and rescued eight pregnant girls.

    Spokesperson for the command, DSP Celestina Kalu, said in a statement in Asaba that the baby-making factory was discovered after detectives, acting on a tip-off, swooped on the premises.

    “On July 30, 2015, Police detectives from GRA Division Asaba, while acting on a tip-off, raided a suspected baby factory opposite the Federal Radio Corporation, Asaba, and arrested its operator, Mr. John Ihezun.

    “Detectives also arrested two boys, one Prince Chukwu and Obum Nwankwo, in the premises of the baby factory,” Kalu said.

    The command said it found eight pregnant girls (names with-held).

    The command said it had commenced investigations into the matter, saying that any person found to be involved, would be prosecuted.

     

  • Baby factory: A monster that won’t go away

    Baby factory: A monster that won’t go away

    Condemned and resisted, baby factories are proving difficult to stamp out, reports OKODILI NDIDI in Owerri, Imo State, where another one has just been discovered

    Breeding children for cash and who knows what else, has been spreading. Residents of Lagos State have been horrified that the practitioners found space in their midst. So have residents of Ogun State, but there seems to be no doubt that the criminal trade has its headquarters in the east of the country.

    In virtually every state in the region, young women, some in their teens, have been herded into some seedy enclosures in someone’s compound where a few male characters are commissioned to put them in the family way.

    What the operators of such ‘factories’ do with the newborns is unclear, though many suspect that they are sold, their mothers given some ridiculously small sums of money. What happens to the sold kids is a subject of conjecture.

    The state governments have condemned the traffic and vigorously fought it. For a good length of time, no one heard anything about baby factories. In Imo State, and even in the entire region, things were quiet on that front following a massive clampdown on the perpetrators of the crime by security operatives and the state governments.

    •The ones rescued in the past
    •The ones rescued in the past

    At least that was the thought of the security operatives and the people of the zone, until recently when the Imo State police command uncovered a booming baby  sales network that had evaded police scrutiny.

    Unlike previous ones, this new syndicate is made up of highly placed individuals and civil servants, who could easily pass for respected and law-abiding citizens. Their modus operandi is equally more effective and difficult to detect.

    With well connected links that spread across the Southeast, this group recruits hapless teenagers from Imo state and takes them to Enugu or Ebonyi states, where they are impregnated and allowed to return to their parents from where they will be monitored until the pregnancy had gotten to an advanced stage before they will abscond to fake maternal home where they will be delivered of the baby and paid off.

    This operation has been running for over one year undetected. According to a security source, over 3000 babies have been sold within the time by the syndicate, headed by a senior civil servant from Abia State, Chief Emmanuel Eke, who confessed to be running the business on behalf of his late wife.

    The prices of the babies sold, according to one of the teenagers who was a victim, ranged between N300, 000 to N500,000, depending on the sex of the baby.

    The group according to the confessions of the suspects, when they were paraded at the Imo State Police Command, recruited the teenagers through their numerous scouts, who lure them with promises of huge sums of money.

    The bubble however busted on the group when one of the teenagers, Miss Ibuchi Okafor, 20 year old from Ihioma in Orlu Local Government Area of the state absconded from her home with a nine-month old pregnancy only to be found in the premises of the suspect at Isiala Ngwa South, Abia state after she had delivered and sold the baby at N500 000 to a yet to be identified buyer.

    According to the State Commissioner of Police, Austin Evbakavbokun, the Police swung into investigation after a report about the missing teenager and found other pregnant girls, including a deaf and dumb waiting for delivery at the home of the suspect.

    The police boss advised parents to strictly monitor the movement of their female children, especially when they are pregnant to ensure that they do not fall into the dragnet of child traffickers.

    Meanwhile, the suspect who told journalists that he made the confession under duress, said the business belonged to his late wife, who he said passed on seven weeks ago.

    According to him, “I am not a child trafficker; I am a Civil servant in Abia State. It was my late wife that was running the home where the pregnant women were found by the Police. I confessed to the crime because of the torture I went through”.

    However a source close to the suspect, who spoke in confidence, said that, “I have queried him severally over the number of pregnant teenagers in his home but he always told me that they were patients in his late wife’s maternal home but when I got a call that he was arrested by the

    Police, I knew that he lied to me. This has been going on for some time but he kept it away from us his close friends”.

    Meanwhile, in a report published by the Campaign for Democracy (CD), 2500 teenagers were rescued from ‘baby factories’ across the Southeast states in 2013.

    According to the report signed by the group’s Chairman in the Southeast, Uzor A. Uzor, most of the girls were enticed into the trade with monetary offers by the baby factory operators, while others were forced into the infamous trade by poverty and illiteracy.

    The CD noted that within the time under review, Abia and Imo states had the highest number of teenagers involved in the infamous trade.

    The group attributed the increase in ‘baby factory’ operations in the zone to high rate of youth unemployment and poverty, occasioned by the failure of successive governments in the zone to put adequate measures in place to empower the youths by creating meaningful employment.

    The report read, “the rising cases of baby factory in the Southeast are a result of the failure of the state governments in the Southeast to create job for the teeming youths especially the helpless girls who are easily lured into the trade.

  • Police parades notorious baby factory owner in Abia

    Police parades notorious baby factory owner in Abia

    The Abia state police command has paraded a notorious baby factory owner based at Umunkpeyi in Isiala Ngwa South council area of the state who has been evading arrest by various security outfits in the state.

    The baby factory owner who is known as Mma Achumba has been under surveillance from the police, SSS, army and Civil Defence was arrested in Akwa Ibom state and brought to the state capital.

    Early last year, Mma who has been in the business for years with the name Mma maternity home relocated her operational base from Umunkpeyi down to a remote area in Olokoro, where the police raided and demolished the operational base.

    The relocation of her former operational base from Umunkpeyi to Olokoro was as a result of constant raids on her maternity home where it was believed that teenage pregnant girls were housed until they are delivered.

    Parading the suspects, the state Commissioner of Police (CP) Habila Joshak said that one Ogechi Kalu female of Ivoyi Akaeze in Ivo council area of Ebonyi state reported that one Uchenna John and Ngozi Onyekachi conspired and sold her six months old son, Chisom Eze to Mma.

    Joshak said that it was alleged that the baby was sold for the sum of N150, 000 and that the child was recovered at Umunkpeyi from an old woman, while Mma was arrested in Akwa Ibom state.

    The CP noted that the suspect has been under the searchlight of all the security agencies in the state and has been in the child trafficking business in the state for years, adding that she has been
    evading arrest for years.

    The Abia police boss also paraded six suspected armed robbers for allegedly killing of a traffic warden while on duty at Brass Junction in Aba on the 24th of February this year.

    The suspects are, Chisom Solomon, 17, Temple Ikpeazu, 21, Justice Wisdom, 19, Sunday Nwabueze, 21, Orji Jacob Ikechi, 17, and Uche Jumbo, 22, while a locally made pistol was recovered from them.

    Joshak said that a team of police men arrested one Chisom Solomon and while he was being searched, one locally made single barrel pistol was found on him, “During interrogation the suspect confessed to being an armed robber and a cultist of Vikings group”.

    The CP said that he gave the names of his other members of the gang, “Which led to the arrest of his gang members and they all confessed to being members of Vikings secret cult group.”

    He said that the suspect revealed that one Teco, Daco other gang members now on the run were responsible for the killing of Emmanuel Nwankwo a traffic warden while on duty in Aba and warned that anyone who kills a police man must be apprehended.

  • Baby Factory Bill for second reading

    Members of the House of Representatives moved yesterday to check the activities of human traffickers, who operate baby factories.

    The lawmakers passed for second reading, a bill prohibiting the harbouring of expectant  girls and sale of babies.

    The bill, sponsored by Eddie Ifeanyichukwu Mbadiwe (Imo/PDP), is titled: “A Bill for an Act to amend the Trafficking in Persons (Prohibition) Law Enforcement and Administration Act, No. 28 of 2004 to prohibit racketeering with human pregnancy or operation of baby production factories, harbouring of expectant persons under 18 years and above, selling or attempting to sell newly-born babies and other matters related thereto.”

    The bill was subsequently referred to the committees on Human Rights and Justice after its passage by the Deputy Speaker, Emeka Ihedioha.

    Mbadiwe, presenting the bill, said the purpose was to counter the criminal activities of persons, who operate baby factories by racketeering with human pregnancy.

    He said it was a sad development that a “second slavery is taking place at this point in the history of the country,” adding that unscrupulous people are recruiting young girls and randy boys to impregnate them with the aim of producing babies for sale.

    Mbadiwe said: “It is unfortunate that these girls are paid N200,000 and then when they put to bed, the babies are sold. What we are doing is reintroducing slavery.”

    The legislator said William Wilberforce moved a motion calling for an end to the inhuman trade as far back as July 22, 1836.

    He said the existence of the NAPTIP Act has not prevented the operators of the baby factories from forging ahead with their evil trade, adding that it is necessary to amend the law to give it potency in fighting the promoters of the “evil trade.”

    Mbadiwe noted that it was unfortunate that the baby factories were mostly located in the Southeast where he hails from.

    A member, Farouk Lawan (PDP, Kano), supporting the bill, said:  “If you look at what these children go through, you will be shocked. They can’t decide what they want to be and when a child is trafficked, he will end up being a menace to the society. It’s a bill, which will ensure the sanctity of the child, who will project our morality.”

  • Varsity women tackle baby factory, child trafficking

    Imo State University Women Association (IMSUWA) in collaboration with Resos Consulting Group, has held a seminar with the theme: Best practices in curbing menace of operation of baby factories, child trafficking and violence against women at the university’s auditorium.

    In her welcome address, its president, Rose Awuzie, stated that the retreat was to create awareness to curb the menace of child trafficking and other anti-social probems facing women.

    Chairman of the occasion, Mr E.O. Okorafor, former spoke on child’s rights, saying the state was among the 12 in the country to pass the bill.

    The Commissioner for Women Affairs, Lady Mma Onyechere, spoke on the war against baby factory prevalent in the south-western part of the country.

    Wife of the State Governor, Nneoma Okorocha, applauded the group for organising the programme, adding that it would foster better living for the nation and promote the dignity of womanhood.

    Vice-chancellor, Prof Ukachukwu Awuzie, expressed gratitude to the organisers, saying the programme was organised at the right time.