Tag: NAPTIP

  • Pastor raped me to cleanse my spirit, says victim

    Pastor Princewill Basil, who is on trial at an Abuja High Court for the alleged rape of two girls, was confronted yesterday by a second victim, who claimed he raped her countless times.

    Basil, the General Overseer, Mountain Movers Fire Ministry Church, Nyanya, was arraigned in 2012 for allegedly having unlawful carnal knowledge and impregnating two teenage-members of his church.

    Giving evidence under cross-examination by the defence counsel, Sunday Kekere, the victim said the pastor raped her to “cleanse her spirit of dirt”.

    “I cannot remember the number of times he raped me.

    “Papa told me it was a continuous deliverance, and he had to sleep with me to clean all the dirt inside me and also cleanse my future,” she told the court.

    When asked if in her statement to the National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Person (NAPTIP), she admitted living with the accused, she answered ‘no’.

    “I never told them (NAPTIP) that. I told them that I always go there to assist Papa’s former fiancée, Cynthia, with household chores.

    “There are days that I sleep over to finish my chores,’’ she said.

    When asked if the pastor had paid her school fees before, she said: “Papa had once told me during deliverance that he gave my mum N40,000 for my school fees.”

    “When I asked my mum, she said it was not true,” she testified.

    The victim alleged that the accused had on some occasions, threatened her with a knife to force her to sleep with him.

    After her testimony, Justice Hussein Baba-Yusuf adjourned the case till March 14 for continuation of testimony.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) recalls that at the last sitting of the case on February 11, the first victim told the court that Basil allegedly told her that her father’s wife was trying to kill her and that the Lord told him to perform a quick deliverance on her.

    “I agreed for the deliverance to be carried out on me. During the deliverance, he carried a white handkerchief and a bottle of oil and asked me to remove my clothes.

    “He also asked me if I was on my period and I told him no. He told me that I was possessed with many evil spirits that had stained my blood, and it will only take my husband to deliver me and I was not married.

    “He said that he will carry out the cleansing on me,” she said.

    The victim testified that the accused led her into his bedroom and asked her to close her eyes, brought his handkerchief and placed it over her head and she became very weak.

    The victim alleged that the accused raped her.

    The offences, NAPTIP said, contravened the provisions of Sections 97, 179, 397(B) and 268 of the Penal Code. If convicted, he is liable to 14 years in prison. The accused had pleaded not guilty to the charges.

     

  • ‘200 Nigerian girls trafficked to Russia for prostitution’

    No fewer than 200 Nigerian girls are trafficked monthly to Russia for prostitution, the country’s ambassador to that Eastern European country, Amb. Asam Asam, has said.

    Asam, who spoke against the backdrop of consular challenges faced by the embassy, disclosed this in an interview in Berlin.

    He said investigations revealed that the crime had decline in Western Europe following strict laws on illegal migration, and joint efforts by Nigeria and the governments of those countries to curb the menace.

    However, attention has shifted to Eastern Europe as the new destination for the trade.

    “The major consular challenge we face in Moscow is the influx of trafficked persons from Nigeria, not less than 200 girls are trafficked every month, and we have so many of them exposed to danger.

    “Some are thrown out of the window and treated harshly, there must be a way of stopping these racketeering, these girls are not tourists, students or government officials yet they are given visas from the Russian embassy in Abuja.

    “So far we have deported over 240 girls since 2012, you will be shocked, at the extent of resistance from the girls, we tell them Russia is not a destination for prostitutes yet they still come,” the News Agency of Nigeria quoted Asam as saying during the interview.

    According to him, the mission tries to curb the menace by arranging deportation exercise for those caught, but the challenges are enormous.

    The envoy said such intervention would be more effective at the point of entry, adding that “the strategy is to stop them from Nigeria, and fish out those involved in the trade.”

    “For instance a well known Russian human trafficker who has been in the trade for about 20 years was caught in Nigeria.

    “The National Agency for the Prohibition of Traffic in Persons (NAPTIP) was on the verge of releasing her before I filed a protest from Moscow to the Comptroller General of Immigration,” Asama stressed.

    He said even the parents of those trafficked encouraged their children.

     

  • Nigeria, Switzerland to fight human trafficking

     

    The Head of Switzerland’s Department of Justice and Police, Simonetta Sammaruga, has pledged partnership with Nigeria in the fight against human trafficking.

    She made the promise at a courtesy visit to the Executive Secretary of the National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons and Other Related Matters (NAPTIP) in Abuja on Friday.

    Sammaruga said Nigeria and Switzerland had enjoyed excellent cooperation since signing a Migration Partnership two years ago.

    She said the partnership had the potential to increase economic, cultural and social development in both countries, hence the need to improve on it.

    “Combating trafficking of human beings is one of my top priorities and we have to do all we can to combat it,” the News Agency of Nigeria quoted the Swiss official as saying during the visit.

    Sammaruga said that she had brought samples of a national plan launched in Switzerland to combat human trafficking to share with NAPTIP.

    She stressed the need for the police, immigration, prosecution and NGOS/CSOs to combat trafficking.

    Sammaruga said that as part of the cooperation between the two countries, policemen from Nigeria would visit Switzerland to help combat drug trafficking.

    “We have cooperation with the Nigeria Police. They would come to Switzerland. Together with our policemen, they would combat drug trafficking.’’

    She said there was a vocational training for Nigerian students handled by Nestle.

    “Students who performed well would travel to Switzerland for a few months to work and get experience.’’

    The Executive Secretary of NAPTIP, Mrs. Beatrice Jedy-Agba, said a lot has been done in the areas of prevention, protection, prosecution and international cooperation.

    Jedy-Agba said the agency was in the process of reviewing its enabling law to include smuggling and organs harvesting, among others.

     

  • NAPTIP enlists ambassadors against human trafficking

    NAPTIP enlists ambassadors against human trafficking

    The National Agency for the Prohibition of Traffic in Persons and Other Related Matters (NAPTIP) has enlisted people to be its ambassadors against trafficking in humans.

    Those enlisted included reporters, officials of NGOs, Nigerian Prison Service, Nigeria Immigration Service and state government establishments.

    The agency said those enlisted were to take the campaigns against human trafficking to rural communities and decry such crime against humanity.

    The ambassadors were enlisted at the opening of an anti-human trafficking community dialogue held in Benin City, the Edo State capital.

    The Executive Secretary of NAPTIP, Mrs. Beatrice Jedy-Agba, who spoke at the event, urged the ambassadors to help sustain NAPTIP’s commitment to checkmating the assault on human dignity.

    A cleric, Bishop Atoe Iyobosa, said he had apprehended three pastors for selling pants to prostitutes with a view to preventing them from contracting HIV/AIDS.

    Bishop Iyobosa said he was embarrassed when he saw Nigerian girls engaging in prostitution abroad.

    The National Coordinator of the Child Protection Network, Mrs. Jennifer Ero, narrated how a native doctor defiled a 10-year-old girl with the consent of her father.