Tag: Prostitution

  • ‘I slept with five men daily for four years in Tripoli’

    ‘I slept with five men daily for four years in Tripoli’

     

    Maryanne Uwadiae, 25, is a troubled woman. Six months ago, she got deported from Libya, where she spent four years moving from one prison to another. Within the period, she was held captive by Nigerian and Libyan traffickers, who forced her into prostitution and use of hard drugs.

    At 17, she was impregnated by Mike Onogedion, her boyfriend, a school dropout,  just about a year to the completion of her high school education in Esan, Edo State.

    Broken and disoriented, Maryanne abandoned her academic pursuit. She dropped out of school to face the pressure of a difficult pregnancy. By the time she had her baby at 18, Onogedion had travelled to Libya en route Italy unannounced, thus leaving her to the child’s upkeep.

    With no financial support from her boyfriend’s family, Maryanne struggled to cater for herself and the child with the little pocket money she got from her mother. Since it could not sustain her and the baby, she became desperate e for any kind of lifeline.

    Her desperation led her to consider travelling out of the country in search of greener pasture. Kelly, an acquaintance who regularly visited her neighbourhood, promised to help her achieve her oversea dreams if only she paid him N400,000 to facilitate the trip.

    “This was in 2013. I was 19 years old then. I was staying in my parents’ house in Ishan when Kelly came to our house and asked me if I was interested in travelling to Italy to work. I showed interest in the discussion because I was already planning to do that, at least to change my living condition. I had a baby I could not feed properly. I considered the offer without hesitation,” she explained.

    Weeks after she accepted Kelly’s offer, Maryanne couldn’t get money to pay for the trip. Hence she pleaded with Kelly to help her get the visa to Italy on credit. She promised to refund the money after she secures employment in Italy.

    Kelly reluctantly accepted the arrangement. He requested that Maryanne should get a travel passport. He pledged he would get Maryanne to Italy and also promised to get her a decent job.

    Weeks after she gave her passport to Kelly, he called Maryanne and informed her about her travel itinerary.

    It was too late for her to prepare for the trip thus she told her mother to look after her baby and left Nigeria in company of boys she had never met.

     

    The tortuous journey to Libya

    Maryanne left her base in Esan, Edo State through Kano State, where she joined another group of Libya-bound migrants with Kelly. At this juncture, she experienced her first trepidation in respect of the trip: when she got her passport back from Kelly, Maryanne was surprised to see that there was no visa on it. But it was not a time to ask questions hence she sat back to brave the ride as a rickety bus conveyed them to Niger Republic.

    She said: “I left my then two-year-old baby with my mother. I bade her farewell, hoping to speak to her when I get to Italy. When we got to Niger Republic, we spent two nights there before we proceeded to the next stop. We travelled a far distance through the desert to Zinder and to Agadez, from where we got to Tripoli.

    “We spent about seven days in Agadez. During this period, I did not eat anything. I felt sick and looked skinny by the time we arrived in Libya. In the course of the journey, Kelly was disturbing me for sex. He assaulted me several times, telling me he wanted to sleep with me in the desert. I rebuffed him on each occasion that he requested for sex. He told me that I was stubborn and told me I would regret my action by the time we get to Libya.”

    Unknown to Maryanne, Kelly had already sold her to traffickers before she left Nigeria. When she arrived in Tripoli, she was forced into prostitution to pay back the money paid to Kelly. By then, Kelly had left Libya and crossed the Mediterranean Sea to Italy.

    “It did not occur to me that Kelly had already sold me to human traffickers right from Nigeria. When we got to Libya, Kelly handed me over to some people and disappeared. I later discovered those people were traffickers. They took me to a large building with several rooms. It looked like a hostel. There, I saw many girls of different ages; some of them were underage, about 14 to 15 years old,” she said.

    According to Maryanne, men entered at interval and picked girls of their choice. “They would take them into the rooms. I was looking at them in surprise and I still did not know what I was there to do. Then, a lady approached me and said, ‘Hey, why are you standing like a novice? Can’t you hustle?’ I asked what kind of hustle it was and  she replied that those young girls being taken inside the rooms were my seniors and they were working hard to pay the boss.

    “She told me the boss had paid Kelly to bring me to Libya and that I needed to hustle to pay back the money. She also told me that I needed to hustle to get LYD 9,400 (N2.4 million) before I could be allowed to go. Then I knew I had been sold into prostitution. Some of the girls I met in the building had been held in that place for years without being allowed to go, even when some of them had already completed their bonds.

    “The only way we could be freed at that moment was if any man comes and says he likes any of us. The man would ask our boss how much we needed to pay before we could be freed. Then, they would pay and we would go with them. In reality, that was not freedom. The men who paid bond for girls also turned them to sex objects in their private houses,” she said.

     

    The road to prison

    Maryanne explained that her desperation to travel abroad in search of greener pasture was not to engage in prostitution but to work as a house help or factory hand, since she has no academic qualification.

    But she had been sold to prostitution and she needed money to pay for her freedom from the traffickers’ den. For weeks, Maryanne said she refused to ‘hustle.’

    She called her mother back home and explained her ordeal in Libya. But there was nothing her mother could do to salvage the situation. To negotiate her freedom, Maryanne’s mother was conditioned to pay N2.4 million into a Nigerian bank account. Since she could not get the money, she told her daughter to agree with the terms of freedom given to her by her boss.

    “When I told them I could not participate in prostitution, they asked me to pay LYD 9,400 which was the money paid to Kelly for selling me to them. I told the traffickers to look for Kelly and get back their money. They told me he had already used the money to pay for his trip to cross to Italy.

    “They said the only option I had to live in Libya was to hustle, so that I could pay back the money. When I declined, they locked me up in a room and beat me seriously. They threatened to kill me and dump my body in a latrine. I called my mother back home and explained what I was facing.

    “Since there was no means my mother and I could pay back the money, I succumbed to their wish. I started hustling and I was getting money daily to pay back the boss. I was sleeping with, at least, four men a day. Sometimes, if there were many clients, I could sleep with more than five men. We were given drugs and other substances to boost our sexual activities. This is what I was doing to for almost a year after I arrived in Tripoli.

    “When I almost completed the bond payment, my mother went to borrow N200,000 and sent to the boss, so that she could allow me to go. When this was done, they told me I still had a balance of LYD500 (N128,000) left.”

    When Kelly got to know about Maryanne’s ordeal, he called the traffickers from his base in Italy and requested to speak to her.

    “Kelly apologised for selling me into prostitution. He told me he needed the money at that time to cross to Italy through the Mediterranean Sea. He told me he would send LYD1,000 (N257,000) from Italy to the boss for my freedom. The woman deducted the balance I owed and gave me LYD500, telling me I was free to go. This was after about 11 months after I had been paying for the bond,” she said.

     

    Freedom to nowhere

    Released from the traffickers’ den, Maryanne dreamed of starting a new life. She contemplated moving to other parts of Libya to look for job as a house help in order to earn decent living. But the lure of crossing the Mediterranean to Italy set in once again.

    She said: “I went straight to the sea side, with the intention to cross to Italy by the ocean.” But unknown to her, she had been set up for arrest by the traffickers. As she attempted to join a group of migrants to the shore of the Mediterranean Sea, she was picked up by Libyan immigration officers.

    She said: “I was locked up in a prison, where I spent four months. I lost communication with my mother and child back home. They thought I had died in Libya since I could not be reached anymore.”

    Relief came for her when an Arab lady came to the prison to arrange for the bail of six Nigerian girls in the immigration’s detention facility.

    “I was one of the six girls she bailed out of detention. When she got us out of prison, the Arab woman promised to help us get factory work. She requested that we follow her to her private residence in Tripoli. When we got to her house, she locked us up in a car garage and said each of us must pay her LYD4,000 (N1,028,300). We were shocked,” Maryanne said.

    She added: “She called some Arab boys to beat us with all manners of materials. I got across to Kelly in Italy and told him my experience. Kelly spoke to the Arab woman and said he would pay the money on my behalf.”

    About a month late, Kelly did not send the money as promised. But, a Ghanaian national paid the Arab woman LYD 6,000 (N1.5 million) to free two girls, excluding Maryanne. The Arab woman, Maryanne said, held on to them and locked them up in a garage without bed.

     

    Freedom at last

    Maryanne and the three remaining captives eventually escaped from the garage at midnight, when they discovered the iron-gate was loosely shut.

    Maryanne said: “One of us got up at midnight and saw that the gate was not properly shut. She woke us up and said we needed to escape. As we ran out from the compound, the Arab woman woke up. She alerted some local militia members. They ran after us with vehicles and guns. We ran into an empty shop where we hid till the next day. We escaped from the area at dawn.”

    Maryanne said she had no choice order than to engage in prostitution to get money.

    “We were stranded and homeless. We needed to buy phones and clothes. I did not have any money with me. One of the girls with whom I escaped took us to Connection House (a parlance for brothel) owned by her Ghanaian boyfriend. We engaged in prostitution at the Connection House to raise money for our trip to Italy through the Mediterranean Sea,” she said.

    While working as commercial sex workers at the Connection House, Maryanne and her newfound friends made money without having to pay her boss. The only ‘tax’ they paid was given to the owner of the brothel, where they resided.

    However, when they thought their tribulations had ended, Maryanne and her fellow adventurers came under regular police and armed robbery attacks in the brothel. They were dispossessed and robbed of the money and other valuables during a night raid by the police.

    She said: “The police raid was fatal. After they collected our phones and money, they went to male section of the brothel and killed some of the boys, claiming that they were dealing in cocaine and hard drugs. They took all the money found in the rooms. They arrested the rest of us and took us to Abu Salim Prison. They asked us to bring LYD2,000 (N514,000) each to regain our freedom. I was there for months before a Nigerian man came and bailed four of us.”

     

    Back in captivity

    Two months later, Maryanne and five other girls were bailed out of the Abu Salim Prison in Tripoli by a Nigerian man simply identified as Alhaji, at the rate of LYD2,000 each, the latter promised to help them secure decent jobs and rebuild their lives. He took them to Abu Salim Rubbish, a slum close to the prison.

    “When we got to his house, Alhaji said we would need to pay him double of the money he paid for our bail. He told us not to bother about the work he promised. He said he purposely bailed us out of the prison to help us serve clients who usually look for Nigerian girls to sleep with.

    “He gave us rooms where men would sleep with us for a fee. We had no option but to agree to Alhaji’s terms. The clients would pay Alhaji directly and come in to have sex with us. We did not make enough money because Alhaji told the clients not to show any appreciation after having sex with us. But some of them would still give us money.

    “When I finished the repayment, I left Alhaji’s house and moved to another area called Garage. The slum is populated mostly by black Africans. I went there to start hustling, so that I could get money to pay my way to Italy.”

     

    Perilous cruise to Italy

    When she found out it would cost her LYD700 to travel to Italy by boat, Maryanne doubled her ‘hustle’. Having gone through hell in Tripoli, she was determined to risk anything in order to reach her dreamland and start a new life.

    She joined a herd of Mediterranean Sea-bound migrants to Italy. She said migrants were laid on the floor of the buses taking them through the Libyan border of Zuhara, from where they would join boats on a four-hour journey to the Italian shoreline through the high sea.

    It was not a free ride to the sea. The buses were stopped for inspections by the border police thus the migrants were expected to contribute money to bribe the policemen at the border for easy access to the sea.

    Each migrant paid LYD300 (N77,000) to the Libyan drivers who drove them to the Mediterranean Sea. The drivers gave kickbacks to the border police to allow them free passage.

    “When we got to the shoreline, all of us who were migrating to Italy came down and we were handed over to Gambian boat owners, who ferried us across the Mediterranean Sea to the Italian shoreline. We paid LYD700 each for the boat ride.

    If the boat owners were Libyans, the fare could be less because the Libyan border police were not allowed to collect from their citizens.

    “When we got close to the shoreline, we were asked to jump into the ocean with poorly inflated lifejackets and tubes. They said we should hide our mobile phones, because the Italian rescue team would turn back the boats to Libya if they discovered our phones. We were told to send distress signal to the Italian rescue team when we got to the shoreline.”

    Luck however, ran out on Maryanne when the boat she was in, was arrested by the Italian water patrol police. The boat was led back to Libya and the migrants fled to avoid being arrested by the Libyan police.

    Maryanne disclosed that desperate nursing mothers and pregnant women embarked on the dangerous journey regularly because Italian authorities considered pregnancy and infants as part of the conditions to fast-track issuance of legal permits to the refugees in Italy.

    Maryanne said it was common occurrence for migrant-laden boats to be attacked midstream by pirates. “They took the engines and watched the vessels capsize with migrants onboard.

    After her failed trip to Italy, Maryanne returned to Garage to continue hustling. But at that time, Libyans had started killing black Africans.

    “Many people were killed. It was God who saved me from being killed during the riot. It was there that I was arrested and taken to the deportation camp. I was deported back to Nigeria in May.”

     

    An odyssey of regrets

    The last time she set her eye on her daughter was in 2013 when she left Nigeria through Niger Republic. Her daughter is now six, but she barely recognised Maryanne. Yet she couldn’t go home after she was deported from Libya due to the shame of returning empty-handed.

    She said: “I had thought I would come back and take my baby when I eventually get to Italy and things become rosy for me. I regret ever embarking on the journey. Kelly told my mother he was taking me to Libya from where we would cross to Italy. This is why my mother allowed me to go with him.”

     

    ‘More pain, no gain’

    Maryanne, who is now working as a sales girl in a local restaurant in Lagos, still has the ambition to travel out of the country for greener pasture. But she wouldn’t reenact her Libyan experience.

    “I don’t want to go through what I experienced in Libya again in my life. I will tell you the truth about my plan. I still have ambition to travel out of this country. I don’t think I can make it in Nigeria because of the hardship I have been facing since I was a teenager. I don’t think I can stay in Nigeria. I will travel to Europe if I see the opportunity.”

     

     

     

     

  • Court remands five for ‘buying’ two ladies for prostitution

    Court remands five for ‘buying’ two ladies for prostitution

    Five persons have been remanded to prison custody for allegedly buying two females for the purpose of using them for prostitution in Libya.

    The accused persons, Osaro Rasheed (47), Caroline Oyasiri (52), Christopher Erhahon (50), Hellen Osarobo (46) and Roland Egbon (52) were arraigned before an Oredo Magistrates Court.

    They were arraigned on a three-count charge of procurement for prostitution, human trafficking and illegal entry.

    Names of their victims were given as Everln Oghagbon aged 23 and Mary Osarobo aged 23.

    The accused persons were alleged to be engaging in ‘exporting’ their victims to Libya for prostitution and other sexual exploitation.

    Prosecutor Patrick Agbonifo told the court the accused persons ‘did fraudulent entry of their victims to Libya of which they are not citizens or permanent residents, in order to obtain financial and material benefit’.

    He noted that the offences which were committed in May 2016 are contrary to and punishable under section 27, 14(b) and 26(1) of the trafficking in persons (Prohibition) Enforcement and Administration Act 2015.

    Presiding Magistrate, Chief Magistrate F.E Akhere referred the case file to the Director of Public Prosecution for legal advice.

    He adjourned hearing of the case to November 24th, 2017.

    Read Also: Man in court for allegedly seducing married woman

  • Two arraigned for ‘luring’ girl, 19, into prostitution

    The National Agency for the Prohibition of Traffic in Persons and other Related Offence (NAPTIP) yesterday arraigned Joy Kenneth and Albert Eze for allegedly luring a 19-year-old girl to Dubai for prostitution.

    They allegedly conspired in December last year to procure travel documents for the girl, who hails from Ewohimi in Edo State.

    Kenneth and Eze were accused of arranging for the girl to travel through the Murtala Mohammed International Airport in Lagos last December 14.

    The offence contravened Section 18 of the Traffic in Persons Enforcement and Administration Act, 2015.

    Justice Abdullazeez Anka ordered their remand in prison custody after they pleaded not guilty.

    He adjourned hearing of the bail motion till June 28.

  • Italian police free teen girl forced into sex slavery

    Italian police on Thursday said they freed a 13-year-old Romanian girl with absentee parents who was kept illiterate, undernourished and forced into begging and prostitution by other family members.

     

    According to a police statement, the girl was freed in December 2014, when officers spotted 67year old man in a car parked outside a Rome supermarket soliciting sex from the teen.

     

    It said that she was taken to a police station and later placed in foster care.

     

    Police said that they waited to announce the girl’s release to allow investigations to take place.

     

    “The girl was raised with the sole objective of enlarging her family’s wealth and both her and her sisters were forced to beg and were beaten with a belt.

    “They were left outside naked and soaked with cold water if they did not follow the orders,’’ police said.

     

    Police said that the family lived in a trailer park but did not give additional details about their identity.

    In Italy, trailer parks are mostly inhabited by Roma one of the poorest and most marginalised groups in Italian society.

     

    Police said that the teen’s parents abandoned her after moving to America.

     

    In September, a judge ordered the arrest of the girl’s grandmother and three aunts for charges that included exploiting underage prostitution, forgery and organised crime activity.

     

    However, they were not all immediately apprehended at the time.

    “The grandmother and one aunt had fled to Romania but were caught following the issuance of a European arrest warrant.

     

    “The former has already been extradited to Rome, while procedures for the aunt will take another few months,’’ Italian police said.

  • France makes paying for sex illegal

    France makes paying for sex illegal

    France parliamentary has pass a law making payment for sex illegal.

    The French MPs finally approved the new legislation on prostitution following more than two years of rows and opposition by senators.

    The motion  was passed by 64 votes to 12 with many MPs absent.

    The Guardian reports that  this law had made it illegal to stand in a public place known for prostitution dressed in revealing clothes. It had been widely criticised by charities and support groups on the ground.

    The legislation passed on Wednesday will treat the sex worker as a victim rather than a criminal. It will also make it easier for foreign sex workers, many of whom are illegally in France, to acquire a temporary residence permit if they embark on a programme to find other work.

    A crucial part of the legislation is that it will abolish a controversial 2003 law, introduced by Nicolas Sarkozy when he was interior minister, that banned passive soliciting on the street.

    In France, prostitution itself – receiving money for sex – is not a crime. But activities around it are. Laws prohibit pimping, human trafficking and buying sex from a minor. Brothels were outlawed in 1946.

     

  • Ojokoro LCDA to rescue under-aged girls from hotels

    The Education Department of Ojokoro Local Council Development Area (LCDA) of Lagos State on Sunday vowed to rescue under-aged girls on menial jobs or prostitution in hotels.

    Mrs Abimbola Whenayon, the Head of Department of Education in the LCDA, gave the promise in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN).

    She said that officers of the department would begin the rescue and rehabilitation exercise in April.

    The officer said many under-aged girls had been lured into menial jobs in hotels or as sex workers by their relatives who brought them to the state under the pretext of better life.

    She said that the girls would be reunited with their parents and subsequently enrolled in schools to become better citizens.

    She said many under-aged girls were deceived and brought to Lagos by close relatives with the promise that they would be enrolled in schools or work.

    “When I was in Surulere Local Government, we rescued some girls, rehabilitated and enrolled them in schools.

    “I am new in this LCDA, but by April, after the holiday, I will start going into it fully to rescue the girls who are being exploited.

    “We will get a place for them, rehabilitate them, send them to school and even seek partnership with private organisations to train those who are not interested in school

    “We will train them in vocational skills that will make them very responsible citizens instead of becoming sex workers or bar girls.

    “After a while, we will link up with their parents or family anywhere in the country so that we can reunite them.

    “If I get government’s support, It will be a success because when I was in Surulere Local Government, I was supported and we helped a lot of under-aged girls,’’ she said.

    Whenayon also reiterated the council’s commitment to educate illiterate adults in the area through the adult literacy programme.

    According to her, this is in line with the directive of the Federal Government.

    She said that about 80 adult students were currently receiving classes in 25 different centres in the area.

    “We are teaching market men and women, commercial bus drivers, meat sellers, pepper sellers and bus conductors on how to read and write.

    “The turnout is good as many of them do not know how to spell their names or calculate their money before.

    “But through the adult education, many of them now understand basic calculations.

    “Many of them have been defrauded by their children or relatives because they missed out of the opportunity to go to school in the past.

    “Some of our students in the adult education class are now in the Nigeria Teachers Institute and others will write the General Certificate of Examination (GCE) conducted by WAEC,’’ she said.

  • Four women plead guilty to prostitution

    An Igbosere chief Magistrates’ Court in Lagos yesterday remanded four women after pleading guilty to prostitution.

    They are Sandra Akomake, 58, Helen Ugwu, 34, Chika Okoro, 40, Roseline Jebba, 43 and Theresa Ordega, 61. They were arrested by the police on Tuesday night for allegedly soliciting for sex in exchange for money.

    They were arraigned before Magistrate S. K. Matepo.

    Prosecuting police Sergeant Nicholas Akeene alleged that the women committed the offence around 11pm at Thompson Avenue in Ikoyi.

    The offence, he said, contravened Section 142 (1) (a) (b) of the Criminal Law of Lagos State 2011.

    Ugwu, Okoro and Jebba pleaded guilty, but 61-year-old Theresa, the fifth defendant, denied the allegation.

    “I know nothing about this,” the sexagenarian said.

    Her counsel, S.A. Owhoraye, said she was a trader and applied for her bail.

    Matepo granted Ordega N50,000 bail with two sureties in the like sum. She adjourned the case till Monday.

  • Prostitution: 30 women bags six weeks imprisonment

    Prostitution: 30 women bags six weeks imprisonment

    Ikeja Magistrates’ Court in Lagos on Monday sentenced 30 women to six weeks imprisonment for prostitution.

    Those sentenced are Funmi Olayemi, Damilola Ibrahim, Blessing Emmanuel, Grace Nwaokoro, Anu Titus, Princess Osu, Cynthian Ozumba, Chindima Eke.

    Others include Blessing Winwah, Rebecca James, Gift James, Bukola Taiwo, Patience Amos, Oyinda Adesewa, Funmilayo Ajayi, Modinat Bello, Damilola Abiodun, Saki Godwin.

    Others are Glory Edet, Blessing Okafor, Tope Obatula, Shade Afolabi, Foluke Kolawole, Tosin Ajayi, Bisi Onanuga, Princess Isaac, Esther Akpan, Cythia Osas, Joy Osas and Patricia whose surname is unknown, among others.

    The accused were being tried for prostitution and breach of peace.

    The Magistrate, Mrs O. Odusanya sentenced the accused to six weeks each with an option of N10, 000.

    “You are hereby sentenced to six weeks imprisonment with an option of N10, 000 fine each,’’ she said.

    The accused, during their arraignment on Monday pleaded guilty to the offence, attributing it to the handiwork of the devil.

    The accused, whose ages and residential addresses were not given, were arrested at Obalenda area of Lagos at 2 a.m.

    The prosecutor, Insp. Femi Alabi told the court that the accused committed the offence on Sept. 5, at Obalende area of Lagos.
    He said that the accused paraded themselves on the street as public nuisance.

    “The accused were caught soliciting for clients, which is against the law of the state.’’ he said.

    According to the prosecutor, the offence contravened Sections 142 of the Criminal Laws of Lagos State, 2011

     

  • My journey into prostitution

    My journey into prostitution

    Tessy Emeron, a 26-year-old woman arrested by the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) of the Lagos State Police Command, has explained why she took to prostitution and also stole a customer’s gold necklace worth about N650,000.

    In an exclusive interview with The Nation on Tuesday, Emeron, a native of Benin City, Edo State, said his father, a retired soldier, had six wives each with a minimum of three children. “My mother is the first wife. He was getting money from special duties while he served in the army and this made women to run after him. But after retirement, he became so poor that he could not pay his children’s school fees. Things finally fell apart when his children started growing up.

    “It was in the process of trying to survive that I dropped out of school as a Senior Secondary School I (SSI) student in 2006. I started hawking foodstuffs, fruits and whatever item I could sell to get some money in order to assist my mother in feeding my siblings.

    “My world changed when a friend of mine asked me to follow her to Lagos to hustle. She told me that there were many jobs in Lagos and that it was an employee that would freely choose the kind of job she would do. She said that if I could work for one year in Lagos, I would have enough money to turn the fortune of my family around.

    “In 2010, I carried my bag and followed her to Lagos. I asked her where we would stay in Lagos and she said the kind of work she had in mind was such that would not only give us quick money but also get us good accommodation. I was very happy.

    “When we got to Ojota, we crossed over and boarded a bus that took us to Ikeja. We stopped under the flyover bridge and alighted from the bus. She asked me to follow her to Ipodo Street, a stone’s throw from flyover. The street also hosts a market called Ipodo Market.

    “We entered a hotel called Sparklight Hotel and we were ushered into a room. Within 10 minutes, the manager appeared and my friend introduced me to him. She told him that I had come to work there and he said he would discuss with me the following morning before telling the owner of the hotel about my arrival.

    “When the manager referred to me as a staff, I was wondering the type of staff he wanted to make me. I thought of working as a receptionist, a waiter, a cook or a cleaner. I made sure that I prepared well for the so-called interview the manager said I would do in the morning.

    “Face to face with the owner of the hotel and the manager, they asked me what I wanted. I told them that I had come to Lagos to hustle and that I could work as a receptionist, a cook, a barman or a cleaner. But they instantly told me that the only vacancy they had was for me to become a full sex worker.

    “My friend advised me to take the offer because there was only one room left, so that it would not be given to another person. I accepted and they gave me the dos and don’ts of the hotel. They said I should not accommodate a criminal in the hotel and should not engage in any form of fighting that would disturb the peace of guests and customers.

    “They said I should pay the hotel the sum of N8,000 every week. I must allow the hotel manager to collect N100 from any man who had sex with me. I must not allow an outsider to sleep with me except a customer whose name, address, destination and profession are properly documented by the receptionist. That was how I started work in the hotel as a prostitute.”

    Emeron said she used to charge her clients between N1,000 and N1,500. “But when market was good and many customers were after me, I charged N2,000 for short time and between N3,000 and N5,000 for all night.

    “My trouble started when I met my boyfriend, Cosmos. He used to play snooper on a street near the hotel. He told me he was a footballer and promised to marry me as soon as he secured a contract with one of the nation’s football clubs or a foreign one. I was happy with him and gave him free sex, including all night.

    “I felt disappointed when I discovered that he was married with two or three children. But I was not too worried because my father is a polygamist and I did not mind becoming his second wife. Some co-sex workers in the hotel had told me that he was a liar, but I did not believe them until I started seeing the revelations of the lies he had been telling me.”

    Asked how she got into trouble with the police, she said: “My trouble with the police started penultimate Sunday when Cosmos came as usual to sleep with me free of charge. To my greatest surprise, he was wearing a gold chain and pendant worth about N800,000.

    “I became annoyed because I was convinced that he had been deceiving me. I decided to take the chain at least to hold it and continue to investigate him. If I discovered that the chain belonged to him, I could sell it and recover all the money I had wasted on him. But if it belonged to another person or his brother, I would give it back to him.

    “That was why I took the gold chain. But the police see it as stealing. I initially denied having the chain, but later accepted and brought it out from my private part.

    “I had wrapped it in wool and hid it in my private part, and the police could not find it because I was menstruating and the whole thing was soaked in blood.”

    Explaining the events that led to the incident, she said that Cosmos had come into her room in the hotel around 9.20 pm and gave her N1000 to help him buy drugs and drinks, saying that he had a headache. He also asked me to help him buy a medicine that would boost his energy for all-night sex.

    “On getting to a nearby chemist, I could not get a drug that would help his manhood. I only bought Codeine and two bottles of Irish cream called Best. He woke up around 1.16 am and asked whether I had seen his gold chain and I said no. When he started shouting, the manager came and said we were disturbing the guests.

    “The police were invited in and they took us to the Ikeja Police Division where both of us were detained. I gave the pendant of the chain to my brother when the police were taking me and Cosmos to their station.

    “When they wanted to put us inside the cell, I brought out the chain from my private part. I had kept it there because I heard that the cell marshal would search us and there was no way the marshal would not find the chain on me if I did not keep it in my private part. Cosmos was later bailed and his brother reported the matter to the Commissioner of Police, Umar Manko, and the officer in charge of SARS, Abba Kyari, a Superintendent of Police.

    “When I was brought before the O/C SARS, he asked about the golden chain. He asked if I wanted to tell the truth or he should find out the truth by himself. I told him that I did not see the chain and he told them to take me away.

    “When I got to the interrogation yard, I saw my ears with my eyes. The type of torture they gave me was such that I would not have survived another minute. I started crying and begging, telling them that I was with the chain and they should allow me to bring it out. They asked me where it was and I told them that it was hidden in my private part. They called a woman police to take me inside where I pulled out the chain from my private part.”

    Recalling her experience in detention, she said: “I have seen hell. Those who tortured me were devils. The place is hell fire and to come out from hell takes God’s grace. It is the place where truth makes a suspect honourable and lie makes a suspect a slave and the devil’s wickedness is openly manifested.”

    But Cosmos, a 26-year-old indigene of Ishan, Edo State, who claimed to be a footballer, denied being Emeron’s boyfriend or sex partner.

    He said: “I checked into the hotel at about 9pm on that Sunday after paying N3,000 for a daybreak service. Later, I begged her to help me buy Rohypnol tablet to enable me to boost my sex strength because I felt weak that night. I took the tablet he bought for me and slept.

    “As I was sleeping, she came and removed my necklace. When I woke up, I did not see her. When she came back, I asked her where she kept my necklace. It was even her bang on the door that woke me up. She drugged me and made me to sleep.

    “She said she only went out to ease herself and that she had not seen my chain. I called the attention of the manager of the hotel and told him what I had experienced. He took us to the Ikeja Police Station where we were detained for two days as the chain was not found on her and the police detained us on the basis of the manager’s report.

    “They allowed me to make a call to my brother, Martins, who came and took my bail. My brother later reported the matter to the Commissioner of Police and the O/C SARS who took over the case. She later brought out the chain from her private part. I did not have sex with her.”

    Cosmos’s elder brother, Martins, said he was the owner of the necklace, saying that he forgot it in the house of one of his younger brothers he had visited the previous Saturday.

    He said: “On Sunday, I went to church and told Cosmos to go and collect the chain from that our brother. I did not know that he branched to the Ipodo hotel and slept there with a prostitute. I am ashamed of him.

    “I took him on bail at Ikeja Police Station. But when I heard that the girl would not bring out the chain, because I know that my brother must have gone there to pose with it, I decided to petition the Commissioner of Police, Umar Manko, known for solving the impossible by using Abba Kyari. Luckily, the gold chain was found in the prostitute’s private part.”

    Contacted for comment, the Public Relations Officer of the Lagos State Police Command, Ngozi Braide, a Deputy Superintendent of Police, said the incident was still being investigated.

  • ‘200 Nigerian girls trafficked to Russia monthly for prostitution’

    Two hundred Nigerian girls are trafficked every month to Russia for prostitution,

    Ambassador Asam Asam has said.

    The envoy, who spoke against the backdrop of consular challenges faced by the embassy, was answering questions from the Europe Correspondent of the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Berlin.

    NAN investigations showed 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. No fewer than 200 girls are trafficked every month, and we have 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.

    “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,” Asam said.

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

    The envoy said such intervention would be more effective at the point of entry.

    “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 encourage their children.

    “I spoke to the mother of one of the girls and she said her daughter should remain in Moscow and survive the ordeal. This is very sad.”

    Asama enjoined the media on sensitising the public on the dangers of trafficking in Russia.

    “This East European nation has become a new destination for them, and believe me, it is a very big crime here,” he said.

    Asam, however, said other Nigerians, who live in that country, are students and professionals in various fields.