Tag: Human trafficking

  • Our plans to tame human trafficking, by Edo Governor

    Our plans to tame human trafficking, by Edo Governor

    •Edo, Fed Govt partner 

    Edo State Governor Godwin Obaseki yesterday spoke of his administration’s effort to halt human trafficking and illegal migration in his domain.

    He said the state was partnering the Federal Government on a project that will compel people to travel legally and properly.

    In his New Year Day’s broadcast in Benin, the governor said: “Our saddest moment in 2017, was the very shocking and sad experiences of our sons and daughters in Libya: who fell victims to one of the worst forms of evil, which is human trafficking.

    “People, who left our shores with high hopes for greener pastures only to be subjected to all manner of inhuman treatments such as slavery, organ harvesting while many died in the Sahara Desert and in the Mediterranean Sea.’’

    He said that the project would involve training and certification for youths, who then would be issued visas to travel legally if they wanted to.

    “Our skills’ acquisition centres will offer training, certification and process the issuance of visas to those who want to travel under well-defined structures to do so safely and with dignity.”

    He said his administration was also cooperating with the Federal Government, development partners and other stakeholders to execute a comprehensive strategy to identify, track, arrest and prosecute all those involved in the heinous crime.

    Obaseki said: “We were all pained to read harrowing accounts of the experiences of the returnees and even more pained to see videos of their unfortunate experiences on the internet.

    “We have also put in place a comprehensive welcome, documentation, counseling, training, rehabilitation and empowerment programme for the returnees. I am glad to inform you all that we are recording great successes on all fronts in this regard.”

  • Trafficking: Edo to track houses of cartels, religious leaders, others

    Trafficking: Edo to track houses of cartels, religious leaders, others

    The Edo State Government is set to embark on a state-wide tracking of members of the human trafficking cartels in the state including religious leaders and other individuals aiding the illegal trade.

    The government also said that part of the strategies to halt the menace of human trafficking include the development of a new social studies curriculum for students and an economic empowerment programme.

    Others are reintegration and counselling programmes and public enlightenment campaigns to markets and streets among others.

    Speaking with journalists in Government House in Benin City, Chairman, Edo State Strategic Planning Team, Prof. Julius Ihonvbere, said the initiatives are in support of the Edo State Taskforce on Anti-Human Trafficking and Illegal Migration, which is leading the effort to reintegrate returnees from Libya and coordinating the state’s campaign to curb trafficking in persons.

    “Governor Obaseki’s administration is giving the issue of human trafficking the kind of priority it deserves by ensuring efforts are made to put a stop to the trend,” Ihonvbere said.

    “Part of our programme is to include campaign against human trafficking in the social studies curriculum in schools. The state government is also making efforts to track traffickers and native doctors, who are enriching themselves with the illicit trade,” Ihonvbere said, adding that the state government has commenced public enlightenment campaigns on the issue, which is holding in markets and other public places across the state. He assured that the campaign trail will soon get to schools when they are in session, stressing that the governor has enlisted religious leaders to take the message to their members.

    According to him, “there is need to educate the people, especially children in schools on the dangers of human trafficking and embarking on dangerous journeys across the desert and on the high sea. Part of our programme is to include campaign against human trafficking in the social studies curriculum in schools. The state government is also making efforts to track traffickers and native doctors, who are enriching themselves with the illicit trade.

    Other strategies he said include the state government’s policy to welcome back returnees and organising counselling and reintegration programmes.”

    Prof. Ihonvbere added that the government is also training the returnees and has provided empowerment packages like start-up capital and packs for those interested in starting business.

    He, however, urged stakeholders, including the Federal Government, philanthropists and international agencies, to join hands with the state government to address the menace.

  • Edo to move against human trafficking cartel – Obaseki 

    Edo to move against human trafficking cartel – Obaseki 

    The Governor of Edo State, Mr. Godwin Obaseki, has described human trafficking as the greatest security challenge facing his administration and has vowed to deploy the state’s powers and resources to break the hold of the human trafficking cartel on Edo youths and end the illicit trade.

    Obaseki said this when he received a delegation of the management and members of Edo Forum of Patriots (EFP), led by the chairman, Patriot Aiyamenkhue Edokpolor, who paid a courtesy visit to the governor at the Government House in Benin City.

    “Human Trafficking has become a security threat in the state as over 10,000 young men and women were trafficked in a space of 12 months and more than 30 per cent of them lost their lives in the process,” he lamented.

    The governor told his guests that “human trafficking is one disaster that has befallen us as a people since the European invasion of 1897,” noting that “Even before the invasion, Edo people were never sold into slavery because we had a very powerful army.”

    According to him: “For us to start selling ourselves into slavery, means something fundamental has happened and much has gone wrong.  We cannot fold our hands, keeping mute as if nothing is happening is even scarier. As a government we took actions and some persons on social media are condemning our actions, I think those people should be arrested for aiding the crime.”

    Obaseki further said that the tales of the returnees are disheartening as “one cannot but weep for their harrowing experiences, who are deceived and moved from Nigeria by a cartel and syndicate who trade these people like common commodities.”

    He assured that his administration will not relent in the fight and would mobilise the state’s resources to make sure the scourge is brought under control.

    Earlier, the chairman of Edo Forum of Patriots, Patriot  Aiyamenkhue Edokpolo, said since the governor mounted the saddle of governance in the state, he has demonstrated extraordinary commitment towards the progress, and well-being of Edo people and the state at large.

    “We have set up a security and economic summit central planning committee to consult and seek collaboration with the Edo State Government and relevant agencies of the federal government for realistic solutions to our socio-economic challenges,” Edokpolor said.

  • Scourge of human trafficking and slavery

    Recently, I was in Italy for few days where I participated in a conference specifically convened by the President of Italy’s Chamber of Deputies, Her Excellency, Ms Laura Bodrini, to discuss a very topical issue -”Women Empowerment and the Fight against Trafficking in Persons. The Partnership between Nigeria & Italy”.

    The conference was convened in the aftermath of the very tragic event of November 5 at the shores of Italy which resulted in the death of some 26 mostly Nigerian girls having embarked on what has now become the riskiest journey on earth, attempting to cross the Mediterranean Sea to Europe.

    It could be recalled that the House of Representatives passed a Resolution (HR. 151/2017) on November 9, to investigate this tragedy. And also on November 29, another Resolution on a related subject matter was passed.

    If you thought the horrific events that led to the deaths of our girls were appalling just as we prepared to leave Italy, we received the terrifying news that another set of 30 migrants had died in the Mediterranean Sea while 200 were rescued.  To our collective shame, these kinds of deaths have become a recurring decimal on account of which the Mediterranean Sea has become the cemetery where Africa’s future which our young represent, is buried. Our findings reveal that the deaths are under-reported as the figures more often than not do not take into account those deaths for which the corpses are not recovered. It must be noted that in most cases some of the immigrants are deliberately dumped into the sea like bags of weed.

    To add salt to injury, humanity’s conscience was recently jolted by the CNN report of auctioning of black African migrants as slaves in Libya where these migrants are normally held in servitude in human cargo holding facilities. I believe most of us have seen the atrocious pictures of black Africans in such overcrowded holding facilities were they are packed like sardines and often mercilessly beaten and terrorized by their captors in order to keep them subjugated. These pictures which the social media is replete with have moved even the brute and the cruel to tears.

    For those who wonder why a fellow human being would strip another of his dignity in this beastly manner, the answer is money. They do it for the money. Slavery is so lucrative especially now that it involves human organ harvesting. It was and it is still a money spinner. In the past, it was so lucrative that a part of the sweet Land of Liberty fought a vicious civil war to keep slavery until the abolitionists won.

    It is significant to underpin the historical difficulties in dealing with slavery. The author of the finest line ever written by man, “we hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men are created equal”, himself a slave owner, was once forced into deep introspection about the ideals he had lifted to cosmic heights and the fact that he himself own slaves. Because slave trade and slave labour brought him so much wealth and influence, he couldn’t himself live up to the eternally truthful ideals he had so brilliantly espoused. He wrote to the effect that keeping a slave is like holding the wolf by the ears, it’s a job you hate to do but you dare not let it go. He placed justice and self-preservation on a scale but pathetically self-preservation won over consideration of justice. This is the case with modern slave masters; justice and life have no meaning to them; all they care for is self-preservation. It’s a trade the mafia and their local collaborators dare not leave because of the money involved.

    What is consistent with the lessons of history is that unless slave masters are forced to stop, they won’t on their own put a stop to the criminal enterprise. We have a duty to stop them and we must begin by accepting responsibility for what is happening now. The question is, what have been done either as individuals or corporately to force these forces of evil to stop this trade in humans? Where is our conscience? Are we not troubled by the unfolding scenario where human beings are bought and sold for any amount much more for as low as US$400 barely the cost of a local cow or horse?

    It is my considered opinion that we are all involved in this crime either as perpetrators or those who are aiding and abetting human trafficking by standing aloof for we are ultimately responsible for what we allow or permit. There is a place for Nigeria in all these. As the most populous black nation on earth, we must accept the fact that if any black man or woman falls, it would be because Nigeria lacks strength. Until the last modern slave is freed, we would have done nothing and our generation will bear this shame forever.

    The legal framework to combat human trafficking is fairly well developed. What is required is the political will and the muscle to execute the laws and policies already in place. As parliamentarians, we have a responsibility to use our legislative tools of oversight to ensure that all agencies empowered by law to fight this scourge are made to account to our people. This we must ensure it’s done with dispatch.

    It is in this regard that I directed that the Public Hearing on House Resolution (HR. 151/2017) which ordered an investigation into the death of the 26 girls recently in the Mediterranean Sea and the Resolution passed mandating relevant committees of the House to investigate the slave trade going on in Libya be consolidated and immediately scheduled for hearing in spite of the pending work on the 2018 Budget. The relevant committees should make sure that all relevant parties and stakeholders are invited to dig out the facts and proffer workable solutions to this heinous crime against humanity.

    Furthermore, the House of Representatives would soon convene a major conference on human trafficking and modern slavery as part of our intervention to help put an end to this evil. This would afford experts the opportunity to make recommendations on possible legislative and executive actions required to tame this evil trade. We must also sensitise and activate, as soon as possible, the ECOWAS parliament and other inter-parliamentary bodies such as IPU, CPU and other affiliated bodies to wade into this matter.

    I therefore call on the President and Commander-in-Chief to lead this struggle for total and unconditional emancipation of the unfortunate victims of this scourge. History beckons on our President with a gold pen and a page reserved for only Africa’s great statesmen if he successfully leads the campaign to eradicate modern slavery. The President should, if necessary, deploy Nigeria’s diplomatic and military clout on this matter. We would like to see an immediate convening of emergency session of the ECOWAS and African Union (AU) to launch a rescue operation as soon as possible. As it is, the voices of ECOWAS and AU are unacceptably too feeble on this devastating issue.  We commend the French President, Emmanuel Macron for taking a principled position on this matter and applying pressure on the UN to take urgent steps in dealing with this scourge. We expect other nations who value freedom and the dignity of the human person to join France in working out a permanent solution to this resurgent evil.

    Finally, let me once again commend the forceful words of His Holiness, Pope Francis who said: “Human trafficking is a scourge, a crime against the whole of humanity. It is time to join forces and work together to free its victims and to eradicate this crime that affects all of us, from individual families to the worldwide community”.

    Now and not tomorrow is the time to act, the world must not shrink from this responsibility.

     

    • Barrister Dogara is Speaker, House of Representatives.

     

  • Oba Ewuare moves to end menace of human trafficking

    Oba Ewuare moves to end menace of human trafficking

    The Oba of Benin, HRM Oba N’Edo Ewuare II on Wednesday said a lot is being done to end the menace of trafficking in person in Edo state through arrangements for the establishment of factories to provide gainful employment for youths.

    “We are strengthening measures and mechanisms to come up with a Foundation in collaboration with local and International NGO‎s through responsive synergy to address the trend.

    “We have started a process with an NGO from Denmark‎ to discourage trafficking in person in Benin.”

    The Monarch who spoke to reporters Wednesday at the Sultan Abubakar International Airport, Sokoto ‎shortly before his departure after a 4-day visit to the caliphate said efforts were being made to establish skills acquisition centres to rehabilitate those repatriated back home and potential victims with a view to discouraging them.

    According to Oba Ewuare” We want to establish a factories in other to open windows for gainful employment as a measure to discourage the practice”, noting that the efforts of NGOs only cannot solve the problems” there’s is merely palliative which cannot last the test of time and expectation to stop the temptation of trafficking in person”, he stressed.

    “I personally started the crusade when I was Ambassador in Rome.

    “We did a lot of work to discourage the practice which was intense in Italy.”

    ‎Oba Ewuare also expressed gratitude for the warm reception with remark that ” I am leaving with a lot of good memories of my visit to Sokoto state especially the royal reception I got of colorfully dressed horses and riders arranged in rows to welcome me into the Palace of his eminence and the display of drummers who thrilled me and my large entourage as a monarch”, he expressed.

  • Obaseki restates commitment to fight human trafficking

    Obaseki restates commitment to fight human trafficking

    Gov. Godwin Obaseki of Edo says his administration is willing to support any initiative that will curb human trafficking.

    Obaseki, represented by his Deputy, Philip Shaibu, stated this on Tuesday when he hosted the executives of the African Youth Commission at Government House, Benin.

    He said the way youths travel out of the country to be used as slaves in their host countries is unacceptable.

    Obaseki, who described human trafficking as “modern day slavery’’, noted that one of the goals of his administration was to build the capacity of youths to enable them to compete favourable with their counterparts across the world.

    “For us as a government, we believe we should reduce unemployment and also help to reduce illegal migration.

    “For us, human trafficking is not acceptable, that is why we are trying to gather not only national, but international support to check this menace,” he said.

    Obaseki said the government was investing massively in technical vocation and skills acquisition to ensure that the younger generation are adequately empowered to provide for themselves.

    Earlier, the Secretary of the African Youth Commission, Dr Carl Oshodin, said the aim of the commission was to fight against illegal migration.

    Oshodin said that the motive was to support government at all levels and make poverty history in Edo.

    NAN

  • Hajj commission steps up fight against human trafficking

    The National Hajj Commission of Nigeria (NAHCON) has said that it would soon establish an Umrah (lesser hajj) unit or department to deal with umrah matters as part of measures to eradicate human trafficking and raise the standard of the exercise.

    NAHCON Chairman, Barr. Abdullahi Muhammad said this at the Annual General Meeting (AGM) of the Association for Hajj and Umrah Operators of Nigeria (AHUON) held at the National Mosque Abuja.

    He stressed that the association has added value to the operations of umrah and hajj in the country.

    He said, “This association has helped greatly from separating the quacks from the professionals while I appreciate the characteristics of the outgoing president.”

    According to him the commission would introduce account officers to deal with individual private tour operators on matters relating to the exercise and their companies; and also ensure that operator register their intending pilgrims on NAHCON’s online registration portal so that they can be vet and to ensure that only genuine intending pilgrims utilize the opportunity of licenses given them.

    While commending the outgoing executives of AHUON for bringing dynamism and raising the status of the industry in the country, he warned the incoming executive not to use the platform of the association for unionism.

    He said there is law regulating the operations in Nigeria and Saudi Arabia hence the need for compliance as erring operators would be out of business.

    The outgoing National President of AHUON, Alhaji Abdulfattah Abdulmajeed, expressed appreciation to NAHCON for its support over the years.

    He urges members of AHUON to give utmost support to the incoming executives of the association.

    The Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Minister, Muhammad Bello who was represented by the Secretary Social Development Secretariat, Alhaji Oladimeji Hassan, said government would sustain the provision of enabling environment for the business to thrive and other issues that affects hajj and umrah operations in Nigeria.

    While commending the association for raising the standard of pilgrimage exercise in the country, he however warned them against duping and cheating intending pilgrims and engaging in other forms of corruption in line with President Muhammadu Buhari administration policy.

    He also urged them to strike a balance between profitability and Islam.

    “We also request the association to implore the members to do more. It is not only those in governments that are corrupt but those people siphoning or taking other people’s money,” he added.

  • Tour operators urged to support anti-human trafficking campaign

    Tour operators urged to support anti-human trafficking campaign

    The National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP) has challenged tour operators, travel agents and airline operators about their responsibility in curbing  human trafficking.

    The Director-General of NAPTIP, Julie Okah-Donli, made the call in a statement on Saturday in Abuja.

    Referring to Section 35 of the Trafficking in Persons (Prohibition) Enforcement and Administrative (TIPPEA) Act 2015, the NAPTIP boss said it was the responsibility
    of tour agents, among others, to sensitise their clients and staff against aiding human trafficking activities.

    She noted that it was their responsibility to ensure that travellers whom they issued tickets to, or arranged tours for, were not exploited at their places of destination, among others.

    Describing tour operators, travel agents, among others, as representing gateways in and out of country, Okah-Donli emphasised that they played a unique role in protecting would-be victims of human trafficking and identifying traffickers who
    travelled with them.

    The director general stated that penalties for aiding and abetting human trafficker intentionally or unintentionally upon conviction was a jail term and a fine of not less than than N10 million.

    According to her, tour operators and travel agents cannot afford to passively sit by while human trafficking is promoted through their means of livelihood.

    She, therefore, urged operators to “recognise signs of trafficking and possible exploitation and to report such cases to NAPTIP.

    “This is because tour operators and travel agents represent the gateways in and out of the country; they play a unique role in protecting would-be victims of human trafficking and identifying traffickers who travel with them.

    “I therefore encourage them to partner with government agencies, especially those who are front line responders, such as NAPTIP, as well as non-profit organisations to stop human trafficking and to help survivors to rebuild their lives.

    “It is not the intention of NAPTIP to shut their operations or have them arrested but rather to educate them on what the law says and get them on board as the agency’s partner in progress.

    “This is to ensure that travellers who enlist their services either as tour operators or travel agents do not end up as victims of human trafficking at their destination countries.” (NAN)
    FUA/HA

  • Human trafficking: 40 arrested, 500 others rescued in West Africa

    Human trafficking: 40 arrested, 500 others rescued in West Africa

    Forty people were arrested and 500 people rescued after a swoop on human trafficking across West Africa, international police organisation Interpol said on Thursday.

    The Interpol-led action comes amid a global outcry sparked by footage of Africans being sold as slaves in Libya, often the final transit for migrants wanting to reach Europe.

    In a statement, Interpol said that some 500 people, including 236 minors, had been rescued in simultaneous operations across Chad, Mali, Mauritania, Niger and Senegal.

    Read Also: 16 Edo girls returned from Libya with pregnancy

    Forty suspected traffickers were arrested.

    “The results of this operation underline the challenge faced by law enforcement and all stakeholders in addressing human trafficking in the Sahel region,” said the operation’s coordinator, Innocentia Apovo.

    The 40 arrested face prosecution for offences including human trafficking, forced labour and child exploitation.

    “They are accused of forcing victims to engage in activities ranging from begging to prostitution, with little or no regard for working conditions or human life,” Apovo said.

  • Succour for 30 victims of human trafficking

    The National Agency for the Prohibitiobn of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP), in collaboration with the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), has presented vocational training equipment to no fewer than thirty victims of human trafficking. The victims are those recently rehabilitated after being repatriated to Nigeria by the Libyan government.

    Speaking at the event, the Director General of NAPTIP, Mrs. Julie Okah-Donli, expressed satisfaction that the major mandate of the agency of empowering victims of trafficking and transforming their lives to be better citizens of Nigeria is being achieved. She noted that the rehabilitating of the victims of trafficking would not complete without providing equipment to help them to practise the vocations they learnt.

    In her own remarks, the Officer in Charge of UNODC Country Office in Nigeria, Cristina Albertin, represented by the organisation’s Project Co-ordinator, Anti-trafficking in Person and Smuggling of Migrants, Polleak Okserei, tasked NAPTIP to monitor the progress of the beneficiaries.