Tag: Sex workers

  • We risk flogging if we don’t sleep with 10 men daily, say sex workers

    We risk flogging if we don’t sleep with 10 men daily, say sex workers

    Over 20 girls have been rescued from sex slavery in a brothel at Oba in Idemili South Local Government of Anambra State.

    The girls were rescued during a raid by a team from the Ministry of Women Affairs, in collaboration with the state police command, following a tip off from a whistle-blower.

    Narrating their ordeal, some of the rescued girls said they were taken to the brothel by friends or relations under the guise of securing hotel job for them.

    They confessed sleeping with no fewer than 10 men daily to ensure their targets were met or risk being beaten mercilessly by their madam.

    They further revealed that they returned between N4,000 and N10,000 on week days, and N15,000 to N30,000 on weekends to their bosses.

    “Our phones and other belongings are collected from us before we are handed over to another woman, with a condition of being released only if we bring certain amount of money to her or be ready to serve her for one year.

    “We make between N4,000 and N10,000 on week days, and N15,000 to N30,000 on weekends for our direct bosses, which are collected by the owner of Top Ten Amaechi Etikokwu.

    Read Also: Man sends fake alert to sex workers after service

    “It is from the proceeds of the prostitution we pay our rent of N3,500 to the owner everyday.

    “We sleep with about 10 men a day in order to meet up with the target given to us and if we don’t meet up, we will be beaten mercilessly by our madam,” they said.

    On how they feed and cope at the brothel, the girls confessed being given N500 every morning for feeding for the entire day, saying the food was brought to them by the security guards positioned at areas in the hotel.

    Confirming the incident, Commissioner for Women Affairs and Social Welfare, Ify Obinabo, said two of the rescued girls were underage persons and had been taken to hospital for medical examination and treatment.

    She said the arrested suspect currently in the police custody would be arraigned at the Children, Sexual and Gender Based Violence Magistrates’ Court in Awka.

    “Before embarking on the raid, investigation was carried out by the ministry and it was discovered that the management of the hotel, Top Ten Hotels, Oba, trafficks girls from all parts of the country for prostitution,” Obinabo said.

    Appreciating police efforts in assisting to rescue the girls, the commissioner lamented the spate of trafficking despite government’s efforts to stop the menace.

    She said justice would be served, restating government’s commitment to end child kidnapping, trafficking and sex slavery.

    She advised residents to report suspicious activities in their vicinity for prompt response and action.

  • UK lifts ban on sex workers donating blood

    UK lifts ban on sex workers donating blood

    The UK on Tuesday lifted a ban on commercial sex workers donating blood, an official said.

    The Department of Health ( DOH ) announced new changes to rules on blood donation, saying it will maintain the safety of the blood supply and will enable more people to donate.

    The lifting of ban followed recommendations from the Advisory Committee on the Safety of Blood, Tissues and Organs (SaBTO).

    New groups of people now able to donate after three months have passed since the last sexual activity include commercial sex workers and men who have had sex with another man.

    People, who have had sex with a partner at high risk of having a sexually transmitted infection, will also be able to donate blood.

    Until now commercial sex workers were permanently excluded from blood donation, and the other groups had to wait until 12 months had passed before they could donate.

    The rules are now consistent for all groups that are deferred due to sexual behaviours.

    A spokesman for the DOH said: The new rules will allow more people to donate blood, without affecting the safety of the blood supply.

    Dr Gail Miflin, Medical and Research Director at NHS Blood and Transplant said: “The SaBTO review took into account the latest available medical and scientific evidence.

    This included more information about the risk of acquiring infections that can be passed on in blood, more evidence on how well donors comply with our guidelines and also more evidence that supports the reliability of the blood screening tests we use.

    “We have one of the safest blood supplies in the world.

    “Anyone may require a blood transfusion in the future and so it’s in all our interests to ensure that we work hard to keep blood safe for patients.”

    Before every donation, all donors must complete a donor health check and have a private health screening where they may be asked confidential questions.

    Xinhua/NAN

  • Commercial sex workers held for ‘killing’ customer

    Commercial sex workers held for ‘killing’ customer

    The police in Ogun State have arrested two commercial sex workers for allegedly killing a customer, Adeyinka Olayinka.

    The incident occurred at KS Hotel, Ifo on Tuesday.

    According to the police, Kudirat Raji alias Angela and Esther Basiru allegedly stabbed Olayinka with a broken bottle during an argument.

    Spokesman Abimbola Oyeyemi said the victim contracted Kudirat for the night, but they had an argument over money.

    Oyeyemi said: “The victim was supervising a construction work on his property. He lodged at night in the hotel. He contracted Kudirat to pass the night with him on an agreed amount, but reneged.

    “His refusal to pay the agreed sum led to an argument, during which Esther, Kudirat’s friend, broke a bottle and she (Kudirat) used it to stab the deceased in the armpit, cutting one of his nerves. He bled to death.

    “The hotel manager alerted the police at Ifo and the DPO, Anthony Haruna, led his men to arrest the suspects.

    “Police Commissioner Ahmed Iliyasu has ordered the transfer of the case to the Homicide Section of the State Criminal Investigation and Intelligence Department (SCIID) for investigation.”

  • Residents groan as sex workers invade Adeniran Ogunsanya Street

    Residents groan as sex workers invade Adeniran Ogunsanya Street

    The once serene and enviable Adeniran Ogunsanya Street in the heart of Surulere, Lagos seems to be losing its innocence, fast. With the recent dualisation of the road has come a proliferation of night-clubs and by implication, the sex trade. Landlords and residents fear a repercussion, which may rub-off on their children and their future.
    They raised their fear with Omolara Akintoye.

    Iw was in the wee hours on a Saturday. But not so for these half-clad ladies busy tearing at each other. They chased each other around the parking lot, shouting obscenities at the top of their voices and literally constituting nuisance in the neighbourhood. Suddenly, a guy punched one of the ladies and another threw a champagne bottle at them. At this point, onlookers made to take sides with the ladies, and then it was pandemonium.

    On another occasion, a fight broke out between a commercial sex worker and her customer. He had refused to pay the agreed price after a whole night show and the girl is not backing down. He held tightly onto his trousers and screamed all sorts of unprintables. It was indeed an eyesore for parents, who struggled to keep their children out of eye and ear shot.

    But these are some of the horrid experience residents of highbrow Adeniran Ogunsanya Street in Surulere, Lagos are now treated to on a weekly basis. Suddenly, the high street, which used to be synonymous with everything class is deteriorating into another red-light district. Many, especially families, who live on and off the street and now fear the repercussions of such development on their children, cite the growing number of nightclubs, bars and lounges on the street as reason.

    Over the years, especially since the 1.024-kilometre street was dualised and upgraded, Adeniran Ogunsanya Street has become a vital artery for innumerable flourishing businesses. Rapid and monumental increase in commercial activities as a result of conversion of residential buildings to commercial use followed, giving birth to entertainment and hospitality businesses. But now, residents are calling on the government to step in. Adeniran Ogunsanya Landlords/Residents Association wants their peace and conducive environment back. Cheetham-West, legal adviser to the association said there is need to checkmate the activities of commercial sex workers on the street before they become uncontrollable.

    “Proliferation of clubs on the street has led to sleepless night to residents. You see customers quarrelling with Commercial Sex workers. There is also indiscriminate parking of cars in front of gates, such that you will be unable to go out at night in case of emergency. It is also a precondition for robbery attack. In the past, some of them had sound proof in their clubs but after some years, they relocated and new ones who don’t know the rules guiding the business moved in and we are back to square one.”

    He said the association has held several meeting with the Lagos Ministry of Physical Planning and Urban Development, without any result. “The waiting has been endless. The Ministry also said none of the clubs on the street have been given permit to operate, yet they operate freely.” He said the original plan of Adeniran Ogunsanya has been messed up and said all that they clamour is decency.  “We are not against commercial activities going on in the street so long as they comply with the laws of the street and do things decently. Club owners constitute nuisance because in the early hours of the morning, their customers litter the street with dirt and rubbish, which nobody cares to clear out.”

    Asked if owners of the clubs and lounges ever attend their meetings, Cheetham said “Some did initially but after telling them what we expect of them, they stopped coming.”

    Human nuisance

    The clubs and lounges, The Nation learnt, are high-brow and demand certain standard of dress code before admittance. As a result, those who fail to make the requirement are left stranded on the street and become targets for street hawkers who peddle alcohols and other stuff. This, they say, also provide fertile ground for armed robbers. This has also hampered the activities of religious organisations, as vigils have now become dangerous ventures.

    Going down memory lane, Chairman, Adeniran Ogunsanya Street Resident Association, Engineer Olufemi Shobo, said the street used to be the cynosure of the whole of Surulere, which even the visiting Duke of Edinburgh, Prince Charles visited in the late 1980s because of its beautiful structures.

    Engineer Shobo who said he has lived on Adeniran Ogunsanya for 51 years said the street was intended as residential. “I moved in to this street in March 1965. Then we enjoyed absolute serenity, until the recession came and quite a number of the residents decided to commercialise their houses. Some of the owners even moved way and let out their houses indiscriminately. People needed money, so they looked for the best way to recover and in most cases, they moved their residence to the back and commercialised the front.” He said some of those who took over these houses used them as banks, eateries other formal businesses, while some turned them into club houses.

    Asked whether the association has made any attempt to engage Lagos State government concerning the proliferation of commercial sex workers on the street, Shobo said there was a time they complained about street pollution and officials were sent to control them. “Once these officials take their leave, there is chaos again; but we kept on engaging them.” He said the club owners are difficult to control, since they neither attend the street association meetings nor pay dues.

    The Octogenarian therefore enjoined the Lagos State government to come to their aid and regulate. At the most, he would like their number to be pruned down to two. “They should be dispatched to other areas as well; government should have special areas for them, so they don’t mix with residents; Adeniran Ogunsanya was designed to be residential and it should remain so,” he said.

    Secretary of the association, Gbolahan Ayoolu said the activities of the commercial sex workers speak cast a big question mark on the integrity of the landlords and residents of the street. “Often, in the early hours of the morning, you wake up and see condoms everywhere. Government should try and bring sanity back to the street.”

    A visit round the street reveals that only three or four of the lounges and bars have signposts. The rest, it seems, prefer to operate anonymously. Ayoolu revealed that “Their activities are more pronounced on Wednesdays, Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays.” He said the street enjoyed relative peace during the tenure of the former DPO, Divisional Police Headquarters on nearby Bode-Thomas but said things have not been the same since this current DPO took over.

    “The street has not been enjoying peace at all and we want the current DPO to try and checkmate their activities,” he said.

    Abimbola Onagoruwa, a landlady, said the development is a fall-out of the rising unemployment, just like street trading. While not trying to justify their activities, she said the government needs to be proactive and provide alternative livelihood, such as skills acquisition. “There is no point educating your child only for her to end up on the street. We have quite a number of them, even university girls who collect pocket money from their parents but who still prostitutes. But when government provides jobs for them, then they can begin to ask them to take up proper jobs.

    Onagoruwa also lamented that the development has given rise to problems of illegal parking among others. “Customers park in front of landlord/residents gates without any regard; government should limit their number.” She said the commercial sex workers hang around on the street because people patronize them. “If they don’t get patronage, they will go away. The night clubs on the street poses a lot of attraction and for the call girls. That is why we are holding meeting and appealing to the government, that certain rights should be given to us as landlords and residents of Adeniran Ogunsanya Street,” she said.

    On his part, Adetunji Santos, another landlord on the street said recession is not an excuse for parents to allow their children to become prostitutes. “It’s so sad that Adeniran Ogunsanya Street, a hitherto peaceful and quiet street has now become a shadow of itself. The commercial sex workers come in with their customers, making noise, disturbing the neighbourhood, drinking alcohol, narcotics, smoking hemp and littering the street. They also defecate in the drains and mess up the whole place. If indeed prostitution is illegal in this country, government should do something to contain the situation,” Santos said.

    While charging parents and care-givers to give their children proper upbringing, Santos urged government to empower the commercial sex workers with adequate skills. For the club owners, Santos said they constitute major problem on the street even during daytime. “If in the daytime these people do all sorts of things, then you can imagine what goes on through the night.”

    Worst, Santos say their customers are recalcitrant and have become a threat the even the security men. “Even when security officials ask them not to park at certain spots, they react violently and are ready to beat them up. Sometimes, they get drunk and fight amongst themselves, throwing missiles at each other, even at the risk of damaging properties. I personally have picked broken bottles in my compound and in front of my gate, this is appalling!”

    He therefore enjoined the Lagos State government to license club for only commercial areas and not residential.

    Apart from the residents, other business owners on the street also have axes to grind with the club owners. A female owner of a clothing outfit on the street, who requested anonymity, said most times on weekends, the customers of the club owners park in front of her shop, thereby preventing customers from patronising her.

    The Nation also spoke with some of the pastors of religious organisations located on the street. A youth pastor of the Redeemed Christian Church of God, Hagiazo Parish, said the development is something that is not acceptable at all: “The activities of the commercial sex workers are not helping our youth and we are not happy about it. Their night activities have drastically affected our all night services. Though they also have rights but these rights should be exercised with caution and respect for other people. As a church, we are trying to see if a skill acquisition programme could be organised for these ladies but the problem is that you don’t see them in the daytime. It is really a serious challenge and we want the government to step in and contain the situation,” he said.

    We’re yet to receive any complaints – Commissioner

    In an Interview with the Acting Lagos Commissioner/Special Adviser for Tourism, Arts and Culture, Hon Adebimpe Akinsola, she said the ministry is yet to receive any letter of complaint from the association regarding their plight or any negative activities of the clubs, lounges and bars. She also said most of these joints are not registered with the ministry. “This Ministry is a regulatory ministry for the registration of hospitality centres, event centers, lounges, bars, hotels. Restaurants and tourist centers should and must be registered under the law, which was amended in 2003. They don’t have excuses at all for operating illegally. We have officials from the ministry going on monitoring and enforcement; I’m aware that they are yet to get to Adeniran Ogunsanya Street but I tell you that soonest, they will get there.

    Speaking on the criteria required by the law for such ventures, Hon Akinsola said one major criterion is that such centre must be able to fulfill the environmental and sanitary conditions, among others. “With the new master plan that the state is rolling out, Akinsola said even centers that are registered should come for recertification and ensure that they meet up with everything concerning safety. Centers that refuse to conform to the new mega-city plan will be scrapped,” she warned.

    We’re taking proactive measures – DPO

    Reacting to the allegation by the residents that they no longer enjoy peace like they used to, the DPO, Bode Thomas Divisional Police Headquarters, Surulere, Lagos, who would rather not have his name in print, said: “The division has not received any complaints from the association. I have even attended their monthly meeting to educate them on security tips. Moreover, I personally, with my men, conduct night surveillance on a daily basis, especially on weekends when the activities of the night clubs are more pronounced. We are taking proactive measures to checkmate crime rate in the area, and so far, there are no ugly incidents or accidents in the area.” he said.

    On the issue of indiscriminate parking, the DPO said “I have warned all night club owners to ensure that there is no violation of laws. And when vehicles are parked indiscriminately, we tow such vehicles. We will continue to do our best and all other relevant bodies that should enforce other laws should also play their part,’ he concluded.

  • Joint Task Team grabs 89 sex workers in Abuja

    The Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Joint Task Team for the Cleansing of Abuja has arrested 89 prostitutes. The  team which was constituted by the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) also impounded 104 tricycles and 114 unpainted taxis.

    Deputy Director/Chief Press Secretary FCT Muhammad Sule made the disclosure in a press statement.

    According to him, the Acting Director FCT Directorate of Road Traffic Services, Mr Wadata Bodinga informed the Minister of the arrests in Abuja.

    He stated, “The Joint Task Team for the Cleansing of Abuja City recently reconstituted by the FCT Minister, Malam Muhammad Musa Bello has impounded 114 unpainted taxis within the first one week of its operations.

    “The Acting Director of the FCT Directorate of Road Traffic Services, Mr. Wadata Aliyu Bodinga made this disclosure when he visited the Minister’s office.

    “The Director disclosed that 104 Keke Napep (Tricycles) were also impounded and riders prosecuted at the Mobile Courts during the same period.

    “Mr. Bodinga further disclosed that during the one-week operation of the Task Team, 8 commercial motorcycles (Okada) were also impounded, noting that in the subsequent weeks special attention would be given to impounding and arresting of Okada.

    According to him, the Task Team would hit the Okada riders from all angles from Airport Road, Gishiri village, Wuye, AYA and Asokoro area, warning that all those arrested would be prosecuted.

    “On the menace of commercial sex workers, he said that the Task Team has so far arrested 89 of them who have been prosecuted and handed over to the Social Development Secretariat for rehabilitation to enable them learn useful skills.

    “The Director, however, urged the residents of the Federal Capital Territory to assist the FCT Administration by not patronising the unpainted taxis, Keke Napep, Okadas as well as the commercial sex workers.

    “He warned that their existence have security implications because they are veritable channels being used by the criminals which is in nobody’s interest.

    “The Director while saying that the Task Team is chaired by the FCT Police Commissioner, Mr. Mustapha Mohammed assured that the Task Team is prepared to carry the mandate of the FCT Minister, Malam Muhammad Musa Bello to its logical end.

    “The reconstituted Task Team which has the mandate to deal with traffic problems, environmental nuisances and any social menace within the Federal Capital City, commenced operation on January 15, 2017.”

  • OPM provides free apartments for converted sex workers

    No fewer than 38 commercial sex workers on a popular hotel along Azikiwe Street, Port-Harcourt have been relocated from their brothels to the Omega Power Ministries (OPM) estate after giving their lives to Christ.

    The instant relocation followed an outreach to the neighbourhood by the evangelism team of the church led by general overseer, Apostle Chibuzor Chinyere.

    The evangelical outreach was designed for street traders, prostitutes, hawkers and residents of the busy Azikiwe Street in Mile II Diobu, Port Harcourt, capital of Rivers state.

    Chinyere, who arrived the area at about 4:30pm, delivered a simple message of repentance.

    He later moved with the team to the brothels for direct evangelism to the sex workers.

    He admonished them to forsake their sinful lives and embrace Christ.

    The popular cleric also promised whoever among them abandons commercial sex will be provided with a free furnished accommodation in a serene environment as well as set up for business.

    When he made the altar call, thirty eight hands went up in total surrender to Christ.

    An excited Chinyere ordered a dinner party to celebrate their conversion at his GRA Phase 2 residence in the oil-rich city.

    Speaking at the dinner, he said: “I am more than happy today in my life seeing the numbers of souls being laid to God.

    “Heavens are also rejoicing over today’s breakthrough and I will stop at nothing but to take one billion souls to God”.

    Some of the new converts, who are specialists in interior decoration, catering and hair styling, were automatically provided with shops and financial assistance to start their businesses.

    The OPM leader also provided them with starter packs containing cooking utensils, food stuff, pillows and new dresses to replace the former mini-skirts and trousers they had on.

    He also promised to equip the shops the new converts want for sustenance while announcing immediate commencement of baptismal classes for them.

    Chinyere also promised to bankroll the traditional and white wedding of any one of them that approaches him with their fiancées.

  • Trafficking: UK court sentenced Nigerian to 22 years imprisonment

    Trafficking: UK court sentenced Nigerian to 22 years imprisonment

    A Nigerian woman, Franca Asemota, 38, has been sentenced to 22 years jail term for trafficking in persons.

    She was found guilty of attempting to traffic Nigerian girls through Heathrow Airport to work as sex workers in brothels across Europe, a statement by United Kingdom (UK) stated.

    Asemota was convicted on Wednesday, 3rd August at Isleworth Crown Court of eight counts of conspiracy to traffic persons for sexual exploitation, two counts of trafficking persons outside of the UK for sexual exploitation and two counts of assisting unlawful immigration.

    She was according to the statement “part of a criminal network that trafficked girls, boys and women from Nigeria to Europe using threats to guarantee their compliance.

    Two other people were convicted in 2013 as part of Operation Hudson. Odosa Usiobaifu, of Enfield, London, and David Osawaru, of Benin City, were sentenced to 14 years and nine years respectively.

    Franca Asemota was identified as a trafficking suspect in 2012 but fled from Italy to Nigeria when some of her co-conspirators were arrested by Immigration Enforcement investigators.

    “She spent time in Europe before the National Crime Agency (NCA) tracked her down to Nigeria. In an operation coordinated by the NCA she was arrested by the Nigerian Economic and Financial Crime Commission in Benin City in March 2015. Once her identity was confirmed Asemota was then extradited back to the UK in January this year.

    She was found guilty of conspiracy to traffic for sexual exploitation and assisting unlawful immigration today (3 August), after a four-week trial at Isleworth Crown Court, and will be sentenced at the same court tomorrow (4 August). Asemota faced 12 counts in total,” the statement reads.

    David Fairclough, from the Immigration Enforcement crime team, said: “Asemota was the lynchpin of a trafficking ring which targeted vulnerable young women in Nigeria, promising them a brighter future working in Europe.

    “But it soon became clear that this was far from the truth. The victims, some as young as 13, were told they would be sold into prostitution. Asemota travelled with the girls in order to threaten them and keep them in line.

    “Trafficking is a despicable crime, as this case shows. We work closely with our law enforcement colleagues internationally to identify the criminal gangs responsible and put them before the courts.”

    Martin French, head of the NCA’s UK Human Trafficking Centre, said: “Franca Asemota and her criminal network took advantage of these vulnerable young women in some of the worst ways possible.

    They promised them a better life but in reality treated them as nothing more than a commodity to be sold into slavery.

    Asemota thought she could evade arrest by fleeing Europe and hiding in Nigeria. But the NCA’s partnerships give us global reach and mean international borders are no barrier to justice.

    This conviction is the result of many years of dogged investigation and co-operation between the NCA, Immigration Enforcement and our law enforcement colleagues both at home and overseas.”

    Asemota’s gang targeted teenage girls in remote Nigerian villages, some of whom had never left their home area before, telling them that educational work awaited them in Europe. The girls would stay with her before leaving, and in interviews with specialist officers from the NCA’s Vulnerable Persons Team many of the girls told how they referred to her as Auntie Franca.

    Asemota travelled with the girls on flights from Lagos, Nigeria, to Heathrow, between August 2011 and May 2012, with the intention of reaching France. They remained airside during the transit at Heathrow so were not subject to Border Force passport checks. However, the trafficking attempts were prevented when French Authorities identified the girl’s false documents on arrival in France. When they were then returned to the UK, Border Force officers carried out further investigations and the case was quickly referred to Immigration Enforcement criminal investigations.

    Five of Asemota’s victims gave evidence against her during the trial. One of them was rescued from prostitution in Montpellier, France, during a joint operation by Immigration Enforcement and the NCA.

    The cases are part of Operation Hudson, an Immigration Enforcement-led investigation targeting a number organised crime groups suspected of trafficking young women, via London, for the purposes of sexual exploitation.

  • Sex workers protest abuse of policemen

    Sex workers protest abuse of policemen

    A community based organization of sex workers, Ohotu Diamond Women Initiative (ODWI) has called on the Nigerian Police to stop abuse on sex workers.
    In a statement made available to newsmen, the organization laments over the widely misunderstanding status about sex work.
    The illegal status of sex work in most countries, including Nigeria has not eradicated prostitution. Instead, criminalization has increased sex workers vulnerability to human rights abuses and created fertile ground for police exploitation, especially of brothel and street-based sex workers.
    “Sex workers deserve the basic respect and protection from violence that each nation owes its citizens. But in many settings, police abuse of sex workers receives scant public attention despite its entrenched global reality. Street and brothel-based female sex workers, one of Lagos and Abuja most vulnerable populations, find themselves targeted for arrest by police, and they experience high levels of violence that go unpunished.  Current city and law enforcement policies towards sex workers create a cycle of arrest that does not result in appropriate or long term solutions for the community or sex workers,” the statement reads in part.
    On the challenges sex workers face, it said: “The challenge that we face as 50 participants from different L.G.As are almost similar. Many of us face violence and discrimination on a regular basis. Regardless of which State or tribe we are from, many of us have experienced being raped, verbally, emotionally and physically abused by police, clients and community members. 
    “There is an unfair discrimination from service providers. Sex workers are not protected or defended by the law when they are exploited and abused. We demand that these violations stop immediately and decisive action is taken against perpetrators.” 
    The statement further revealed how sex workers suffer abuse from the Nigerian Police Officers. “Thirty percent of sex workers interviewed told researchers that they had been threatened with violence by police officers, while 27% actually experienced violence at the hands of police. Reported incidents included officers physically grabbing and kicking, as well as beating them; one incident of rape; one woman was stalked by a police officer; and throwing food at one subject. Sexual harassment included fondling of body parts; giving women cigarettes in exchange for sex; and police offering not to arrest sex workers in exchange for sexual services. 
    Several times the Police have raided our hotels beating, stealing and having sex with us without protection.” 
    In a bid to curtail the abuses sex workers suffer from Policemen, the Executive Director of SafeHeaven Development Initiative, Margaret Onah has criticised the method of which Policemen uses to extort money from sex workers and abuse. 
    According to Onah, the Nigerian Policemen are not mindful of the fundamental human rights that should be accorded to sex workers. 
    “It is dehumanising when Policemen abuses, sex workers the way they do. We are using this channel to voice out our pains in the course of survival. The government needs to do something about it. It is better if sex workers are charged to court than naming them, harassing them, stealing their money, stealing their properties, and having sex with them unprotected.” 
    Speaking on what could be done to end the abuse by Policemen, she said: “the Police needs to re-strategise. The fact that sex work is illegal doesn’t mean that they should kill anyone find doing the job.  
    “Sex workers are citizen of this country first of all, and they need to be respected like every other citizen.” 
    Speaking on harassment faced with Policemen, Esther Eghosa said: “Time without numbers, the Policemen break our doors to start packing us like goats to the station. If you don’t have money to bail yourself, they will say they want to sleep with you unprotected which is very bad.
    Eghosa, who is a sex worker further stress, “As a woman in the brothel, we protect ourselves, we use condoms, but with the Policemen, you don’t have a say.”
  • 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.

     

  • 3,000 sex workers arrested in Abuja

    3,000 sex workers arrested in Abuja

    Three thousand commercial sex workers have been arrested by the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Special Task Team on City Cleaning and Management in the last 90 days.

    They have been handed over to the Abuja Environmental Protection Board (AEPB) for prosecution and rehabilitation.

    The task team also arrested 2,534 street hawkers and beggars. One hundred and two strayed animals were removed from illegal cattle markets in Gudu and other parts of the city during the period.

    The team impounded 4,790 commercial motorcycles, 883 Keke Napep, 645 unpainted commercial vehicles and 84 illegal commercial buses.

    Assistant Director/Chief Press Secretary (FCT), Muhammad Sule, spoke yesterday in a statement. He said the FCT Permanent Secretary, Mr. John Chukwu, an engineer, made the disclosure after a meeting with the Chairman of the Task Team and the FCT Police Commissioner, Mr. Wilson Inalegwu, in Abuja.