Tag: trafficked

  • Trafficked teenagers

    Trafficked teenagers

    A commendable rescue, but there is still room for improvement

    Yet another disturbing human trafficking case, involving 10 Nigerian teenage girls, showed that there is still a lot to be done to tackle the crime. A viral video showing the victims provoked public outrage. They were taken to Ghana from various states in Nigeria, including Imo, Plateau, Benue and Anambra. They were rescued following the intervention of the Nigerians in the Diaspora Organisation (NIDO) in Ghana, and anti-human trafficking authorities in Nigeria.

    Among them were sisters whose parents were said to be unaware of their whereabouts. One of them was reported saying they were “lured with the promise of better life and education in Ghana,” but they “ended up in a nightmare.” The victims also said they were forced into prostitution.

    According to the Director-General of the National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP), Prof. Fatima Waziri–Azi, “The girls have been rescued and are safe. The perpetrator has been arrested.” The agency, she said, was “in touch with the Ghanaian Anti-Human Trafficking Unit.” One of the victims was said to be a relation of the unscrupulous perpetrator. Those involved in the crime must be prosecuted for a deterrent effect.

    The boss of the Nigerians in Diaspora Commission (NIDCOM), Abike Dabiri-Erewa, visited Ghana and met with the rescued girls, demonstrating that the country’s authorities took the matter seriously. The rescued girls are expected to be handed over to NAPTIP for counselling and rehabilitation before they are returned to their respective states.

    The country’s fight against human trafficking, Waziri–Azi noted, led to “the conviction of 29 human traffickers from January 2024 till date, 67 traffickers in 2023, 80 in 2022 and a total of 670 human trafficking convictions since the inception of the agency, including the rescue of over 23,000 victims.” However, it is obvious that there is a need to intensify the fight.  

    Read Also: Suit seeking Ganduje’s removal as APC national chair June 26 for hearing

    The authorities have a major role in ensuring socio-economic conditions that discourage human trafficking, particularly by empowering the categories of citizens who are more susceptible to the sugar-coated assurances of traffickers. 

    Communities and families also have an important role in fighting the crime through increased vigilance. Parents, in particular, should pay greater attention to the activities of their children, to prevent them from falling prey to human traffickers. Preventing them from falling victim is better than hoping they can be rescued if they become victims. Sadly, some of the human trafficking victims cannot really be described as such because there are cases in which the so-called victims and their parents knowingly and willingly cooperate with traffickers.

    It is commendable that the Federal Ministry of Women Affairs announced a planned collaboration with NAPTIP concerning rehabilitation of human trafficking victims, following the recent case in Ghana. Minister of Women Affairs Uju Kennedy-Ohanenye, who visited the headquarters of NAPTIP in Abuja, in connection with the issue of the Nigerian girls trafficked to Ghana, said her ministry “will join hands with NAPTIP to empower them, give them skills or send them to school.”

    There is a connection between this issue and empowerment of the girl-child. Females are the usual targets of human traffickers, whose objective is sexual exploitation. All levels of government in the country should do more to empower girls, which would enable them to resist the tricks of traffickers.  

    Notably, the minister also announced plans for advocacy targeted at diverse stakeholders, including operators of commercial transport companies, the aviation sector, the marine sector, and parents across the country. The relevant agencies should also increase their social enlightenment efforts regarding the issue.

    Indeed, the fight against human trafficking is a social battle. The authorities and the people must jointly combat the crime.

  • Agonies of Nigerian women trafficked to Saudi Arabia

    Precious Igbonwelundu recently met with girls who were lured abroad with promises of El Dorado, now back with hopes shattered, they tell their harrowing stories.

    When Peace Chima, 25, was shipped to Saudi Arabia in March, she never knew the life that awaited her. She was told by a supposed agent, Deborah Adejumo, that she would have a better life in the Arab country, where she’s supposed to work as house maid for about five hours daily and then have the rest of the day to herself.

    It was until she arrived in Saudi Arabia that it dawned on her she was trafficked to become a domestic slave for her Arabian masters, who, she later understood, footed her travel expenses by paying $5,000 to the agent.

    With that amount paid the trafficker and the monthly salaries she receives from her masters, Chima has been reduced to a slave to the point that she was beaten with wire connected to electric vibrator for quarrelling with her boss’ 20-year-old daughter who allegedly stole her money.

    Hell has no other name

    Like Chima, Onyinye U, Favour T, Mercy A, Ruth D, Chinonso A, Serena J, Tracy Morgan, Lydia I, Blessing John, Peace C, Motunrayo A and Monsurat O are currently experiencing ‘hell’ in the hands of their various masters, with a lot of them subjected to sexual abuse.

    Several complaints to Madam Adejumo who took them to that country had been met with threats of arrest, harassments with their international passports seized.

    Already, Tracy Morgan is said to have gone missing after allegedly being sexually abused by her masters. Another victim Motunrayo, it was gathered, was sent to another family three weeks into her serving her master because she complained of sexual harassment.

    The women, who are crying out to the federal government to bring them back home, said they have been subjected to various dehumanising treatments and worst still, the agents were ripping them off their wages.

    In a chat with The Nation, Chima said all complaints to the agent fell on deaf ears, adding that their passports were seized at the point of entry into the country.

    When she couldn’t take the suffering anymore she told her master she was quitting but she was threatened with arrest and accused of theft, an offence that could attract death sentence for her.

    She said: “What we are going through here is unbelievable. We are referred to as Kadama, that’s slaves. I have complained to the agent several times but she does not care. She is only interested in the money she makes off us.

    “Some of us are facing sexual harassment with their madam’s son and husband. Some are missing now. I also have some friends who are working here but with different company and facing the same thing.

    “Some have fled the homes they were posted to and are on the streets trying to survive without their passports. That is dangerous but they do not have another option.

    “Right now, Tracy is missing and her sister, who is also in Saudi Arabia, has not been able to locate her. She reported to the agent in Nigeria and nothing has been done about it. We cannot say if she’s alive or not.”

    The victim, who is currently having a running battle with her trafficker for refusing to pay her $750 each month for eight months, said she paid the first four months until she realised that their masters had paid $5,000 before they were brought in.

    “My employer paid her $5,000 for our documents and flight but she told us back in Nigeria that she was footing the bills and that we will pay her our salaries for eight months to cover the expenses.

    “I used to pay her the money until one day I got tired and said I wanted to go but was told by my master that they paid the agent $5,000 to bring me. Can you imagine that kind of wickedness? The money was collected upfront and she was still collecting our monthly salaries not minding the demeaning treatments were are subjected to here.

    “Since I knew about it, I have refused to give her any kobo. Let her do her worst. I am just tired of all the suffering. Imagine that my boss’ daughter stole my money and I caught her. We started arguing over it and her mother put electric on my body for quarrelling with her daughter. Yes, they plugged me to electric and I was shaking. They flogged me too.

    “They use us like animals here. That wicked woman told me in Nigeria that I was coming to do housemaid job and that we will be three to five maids in a house, with each doing specific jobs. She said once I was done with my work, I can go and do other things with my time but all those turned out to be false.

    “I work round the clock. There are days I do not sleep and I do not have right to complain when I am tired. I have been working with a family of 16. They have 20 rooms en-suite. The visitor’s room is like three rooms in one and the parlour like five.

    “Sometimes I cook more than six times a day and most times I do not share of the meal; I clean all these rooms and toilets daily, wash clothes. I go to bed by 3am and wake up by 5am. These people do not care whether I am well or not. They do not care if I eat or not. All they want is to get their job done.

    “The agent told me that once we arrived Saudi Arabia, our employer will provide everything we need like clothes, food, cream, soap, shoes, room, medicine and freedom.

    “I have being the one buying my personal needs including the slave uniform which we wear here as maids. Most times, I am not allowed to eat food despite the fact that I cook between three to six times a day. I work from morning till the next morning without food. When I am sick and tell them, they say it is none of their business because they have paid for me,” she said.

    Explaining her face-off with Adejumo, Chima said some of the trafficked women even paid the agent over N500,000 back in Nigeria, adding that she was still taxing those ones.

    “Myself and my friends have resolved to pay her no kobo even if we are killed. What kind of exploitation is this? Every month the woman ships people to Saudi Arabia and makes money from their masters. Yet, she still collects eight months of their salaries, despite all these suffering we go through? She should do her worst.”

    Ibukun James (not her real names) also told The Nation how she was made to mix cement with her bare hands in order to repair a broken oven.

    While her master and his wife respect her dignity as a human being, John said their adult children were basically slave drivers. Aside being over laboured with domestic chores, John said they usually make her climb ladder and wash the outside of the house as well as the walls.

    Asked what her employers did after seeing what the cement did to her hands, James said “nothing. They just told me to apply Vaseline on it.”

    Another woman Chidinma, who was trafficked to the country last December, claimed some of the women in her batch were asked to burn themselves for refusing to work.

    They were also made to drink water from toilet by an Egyptian member of staff of the company that trafficked her because they refused his inordinate sexual advances, she said.

    “Our agents don’t care about what people go through here. All they care about is their payments. When you complain to them, they either block you or ask you to keep enduring.

    “I volunteered to speak out to Nigerian authorities so they can look into this issue because our women are suffering. We were sold into slavery without our knowledge, or consent.

    “Many face hard labour, sexual harassment. Many have been killed, starved and even stopped from communicating with their families back home.

    “They seize our phones and passports to cut us off from the rest of the world and ensure we cannot runaway. There’s so much maltreatment here. Many of us work 19 hours daily without food and with beatings.

    “God! Some will be raped and when their madams catch their husbands in such act, they cover up for them and punish the maids without mercy. When you tell them you want to go back to your country, your passport will be seized. We are dying in this country. We are crying out to our government to safe us. These pains and sufferings are unbearable. They call us slaves and that is how we are treated.

    “Even the companies that take us there do not treat us well. They are majorly the cause of this problem. When an Arab family pays over N2million for a housemaid and keeps paying the company monthly salary, what do you expect? They will overwork the maid. In some homes when you finish your job, they will take you to a neighbour’s or a sister’s house to still work. If you refuse to do so, you are punished.

    “There’s an Egyptian guy who works as a supervisor for the company that brought me. This guy will be sleeping with anyone he fancies and you dare not say no when he makes his intentions known to you. If you decline, you will be in that company for months without work, salary nor steady food and water.”

    Victim’s relatives cry out

    Lamenting the inhuman treatment meted the women, a relative to one of the victims, Philip Nwagbo said he had contacted the National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP) and reported the matter but nothing had been done.

    He said that he also sent a message to Presidential Adviser on Diaspora Affairs, Mrs. Abike Dabiri-Erewa but received no reply.

    According to him, “I called NAPTIP and gave them all available information. I even gave them the telephone numbers and address of the agent who trafficked 12 of these women to Saudi Arabia.

    “I first called them over three weeks ago and since then; I have called not less than three times. Even yesterday (Thursday), I called again but the guy who picked the phone said they were busy and will call me when it is my turn.

    “I do not know what he means by that statement. Is it when the women are killed that it will get to my turn? If they cannot bring them back, they should at least get the agents to produce their passports so that the women who can come back on their own will.”

    Traffickers’ modus operandi and government’s failure

    The change in tactics by human traffickers did not start today. It has been happening unabated for years now. They present themselves as agencies that help unemployed persons secure jobs within and outside the country; invite their victims for interviews.

    Afterwards, they shortlist those they desire and tell them they have jobs for them abroad, with promises of fat salaries and liberties. These women are made to belief they just have to pay back some months of their earnings to the company to defray their travel expenses only to realise they have been sold as slaves on arrival at the designated countries.

    Their passports are collected at the airport and most times, they are moved to a camp on the outskirts of the city. They are subsequently handed over to their masters at whose residence they are branded with the slave’s uniform and identity cards.

    In the course of investigating a similar case in April, The Nation found out there were insiders at the Saudi Embassy in Nigeria that aided this illicit trade, said to be a legal practice in that country.

    The victim, Bello, became unwell and collapsed intermittently without care from her masters and was constantly being threatened by her agent, a certain Olori Omolara, whose details including telephone numbers as well as the contact of her Saudi Arabian accomplice, our Correspondent provided NAPTIP.

    Despite the above, Omolara, who told our Correspondent then that she was not afraid of anyone, was yet to be arrested.

    Although Bello was brought back in July through the personal intervention of the Director-General, NAPTIP, Madam Juli Donli, the nonchalance exhibited by the Nigerian Embassy in Saudi Arabia on that case left much to be desired.

    Contacted on the allegation by Nwagbo, Donli expressed shock over the comment, adding that he should write a detailed letter addressed to the Director-General NAPTIP.

    She said: “I do not know what the persons mean by when they get to his turn. Tell him to write a petition addressed to the Director-General. He should include details, addresses and evidence if he has them.

    “We need evidence to clampdown on those agents, agencies and seal their premises. Without evidence, we cannot do anything. We have been clamping down on some of them. The person who can give you the statistics at the moment is the Director of Investigations.

    “The truth is that it is not so easy to bring back these women, that are why we keep begging them not to fall victims to traffickers. Let the relative send the petition, I will ensure we follow it up.”

    The Director, Investigations, Josiah Emerole, was contacted on the statistics of arrested agents or sealed agencies but he told our Correspondent to call again by noon on Saturday.

  • Over 12,000 rescued from being trafficked, says NAPTIP

    The National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP) says it has so far rescued over 12,000 Nigerians from being trafficked and convicted 389 human traffickers since inception.

    NAPTIP Zonal Director, Lagos Chapter, Mrs. Kehinde Akomolafe, disclosed this yesterday at a Conference/Awareness Campaign on Prostitution/Human Trafficking and Smuggling of Migrants organised by the Lagos State Ministry of Women Affairs and Poverty Alleviation in Lagos.

    Akomolafe, who spoke on Causes/Effects of human Trafficking and Society, highlighted causes of human trafficking to include greed, laziness, ignorance, among others, said that agency was now more committed and determined than ever to prosecute anyone involved in human trafficking no matter how highly placed in the society.

    According to Akomolafe, NAPTIP condemns people using under-aged children as house helps, pointing out that anyone caught in the act would face the wrath of law.

    The campaign, according to the Commissioner for Women Affairs and Poverty Alleviation, Dr. Lola Akande, was designed to create awareness among the populace on prostitution and human trafficking in Lagos, and the state has employed various measures to eliminate the ugly trend of human trafficking.

    Akande who was represented by the Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Women Affairs and Poverty Alleviation, Mrs. Abiola Liadi, highlighted some of the measures to contain the human trafficking to include sensitisation of the populace through conference and seminars, empowerment and vocational training for women to alleviate poverty which is said to be one of the root causes of human trafficking.

    “In this regard, Lagos State government through the ministry organised massive vocational skills acquisition trainings for residents of the state, especially women. So far, over 50,000 trainees graduated from our 17 functional centres located in different parts of the state since inception till date,” said Liadi.

     

     

  • ‘100 pupils trafficked to Libya in four months’

    One hundred pupils of Idogbo Secondary School, Benin, Edo State, were trafficked to Libya in the last four months, Senior Special Assistant to Governor Godwin Obaseki on Human Trafficking and Illegal Migration Mr. Solomon Okoduwa has said.

    Speaking in Benin during an advocacy programme, Okoduwa said teachers in the school, concerned about how the college had become a harvest ground for traffickers, gave him the figure.

    He said the government would not allow the evil to thrive.

    “The government will step up its campaign against trafficking. The Task Force Against Human Trafficking will be on the trail of the human traffickers,” the aide said.

    He warned pupils to be wary of the antics of traffickers, who are bent on deceiving them to embark on dangerous journeys.

    “Henceforth, report anyone who tells you to travel to Europe. They are simply taking you through Sahara Desert and the Mediterranean Sea and you may eventually end up in Libya.

    “The number of pupils who have been trafficked from your school in this short period is overwhelming.

    “The truth is that many of them might have been imprisoned there or facing one challenge or the other.

    “Taking the route of Sahara Desert and other illegal routes is hellish.

    “Many died of hunger,  many were drowned in Mediterranean Sea while in search of greener pastures.

    “Worse still, the families of those people who died on their journey were made to pay for the travel expenses, when unknown to them, their loved ones have gone to the great beyond.

    “If anyone tells you to travel abroad through Libya, tell him or her capital ‘NO’.  If you must travel for any reason,  travel the right way.”

    NAN reports the government received 3,400 Libya returnees in the last six months.

  • ‘How African girls are trafficked across Europe’

    ‘How African girls are trafficked across Europe’

    Trafficking in women and girls is an insult to human dignity and an assault to freedom. In this report, YETUNDE OLADEINDE looks at the reasons why trafficking continues and the experiences of social workers and missionaries who work on the field.

    Over the years, the issue of trafficking in women and girls for the purpose of commercial exploitation has generated a lot of controversy, yet the trend continues unabated. According to the United Nations statistics on trafficking, about 2.5 million people around the world are ensnared in the web of human trafficking at any given time.

    While men and children are trafficked for hard labour, women and girls are typically trafficked into the commercial sex industry. While some sex trafficking activities are highly visible, such as street prostitution, other victims remain unseen, operating out of unmarked brothels in unsuspectingand sometimes suburban neighbourhoods. Sex traffickers may also operate out of a variety of public and private locations, such as massage parlours, spas and strip clubs.

    Recently, this reporter ran into a group of people who have been working to reduce the trafficking of young girls across the world. The conversation was kicked off with a documentary on the plight of trafficked girls and the fact that the number of girls from Nigeria is on the increase.

    A recent documentary of the experience of a lady in Greece where it was reported that a lady had 80 men a day was mind blowing. “She was locked in a room and unconscious half of the time. She is back in Nigeria and being rehabilitated. She also said that at a point, some animals were let loose on her. The family often times submits land documents and property that they have as collateral and when the girls get there, they tell them they would work for a fee and it is when they get there that they realise that the fee is in the region of 60,000 Euros considering that the girls get between 5 and 20 Euros per client for a lot of fees. So they work seven days a week,” states Blessing, a volunteer from Youths with a Mission.

    Next, Beth Harrell and Janet Weiner, who are missionaries, add their voices to the discussion. Interestingly, this is one area that Weiner is very passionate about and she paints vivid pictures of some of her experiences. At the beginning, the mother of four had a number of options of the things that she wanted to do and then she prayed about it. “I was later moved to do things about girls and women that were being trafficked. I saw the girls like my daughters; I saw them in Thailand and Cambodia. The first time I saw them in Thailand, I was with two of my daughters and they connected with the girls as if they were friends. It made me know that they were ordinary girls in extraordinary circumstances.”

    Weiner continues: “A lot of reasons were given for doing this and I found that people can end up in prostitution by choice of being trafficked. Choice is a relative term, because I don’t think anyone will willingly go into prostitution.”

    Passionate about what she does, Ellen who has been working with a number of Nigerian girls trafficked to France takes you into their world.  “I discovered that about 95 per cent of the girls I come across are Nigerian girls. We go out on the streets to them and talk to them. The network is very huge and it takes everyone in a society to stop this. Interestingly, most of the girls that we come across have a church background and they can sing a number of beautiful songs, songs that they learnt in the choir. One girl actually told me that she was the leader in the choir. Then we kept wondering how she got there, somebody who was in the church and in the choir singing to the world,” Weiner continues

    Usually for Weiner and her team, every encounter they had with the girls was memorable as well as heart breaking. “Their voices echoed as we walked away but we would keep loving and helping them. Once there, a lot of damage is done. So it would be better to prevent it from happening and that is why we are involved.”

    Now you want to know if there was anything she could have done to prevent the girls from doing this and she replies this way: “I don’t think we can prevent the girls over there but I think it is better to prevent them in Nigeria first. We go out every other week. If we do it more often, their bosses get mad. A team goes out during the day and another in the night. We build relationships with them and take gifts to them. We try to bless them in little ways, read the Bible with them and sing songs which they find touching. More than anything else, they want us to pray for them. Their faith is very strong, they know that what they are doing is very wrong but they are trapped.”

    She pauses and remembers the case of a lady who was murdered a few weeks back. “That day, I was going to read the Bible and I had my phone in my hand. This sweet lady then quickly said to me: ‘Take my picture’ and we took a shot together,” she says, showing you a lady beaming with smiles on her desktop. She continues the sad story: “She died just before the last Christmas. It must have been a violent death because she was found with no clothes on in that river. It was good that I had the photos; we saw a beautiful girl, a girl with lots of potential. They are all very intelligent, some are literate and some are not. I do have a number of other stories that I got from a colleague who works in a social agency. Here you find details of how they got into the business, but we try to respect their privacy.”

    At Christmas, Valentine and other special seasons, the group tries to reach out to the girls in different ways. “Every time we go out, we tell them that they are valuable and God loves them and they are under so much pressure, so much shame and condemnation. So every time we go out, we convey how much God loves them.”

    Weiner then goes on to tell you that she has also visited NAPTIP to see how she can provide a link for the girls over there. “We do not have this kind of agency in France and we are still thinking of how to go about it. The hard thing is that the network is so big and dangerous. Two girls have run away and they came to stay at our Mission house. While one had a good ending to her story, she was able to be flown to London with the help of the French police.”

    She adds that “The second girl went to the church and she was taken to social worker but somehow they didn’t have a secure place. They put her in a hotel and locked her in there for weeks. Along the line, she got scared and ran away and now she is back on the streets. These girls usually would be with about 10 to 30 men a day and she is supposed to earn about 300 Euros a day. The money is used to pay the Madam, some for feeding, lodging and other needs. Most of the stories we hear is that the monies sent to Nigeria is used to build houses and to buy cars.”

    Pastor Peace Alabi of the Redeemed Christian Church of God, Kings Court, who has also worked with a number of trafficked girls talked about her experience in Paris. “In year 2006, while I was worshipping in one of our churches in Dening area, I found that the area was populated by this people but I disagree a bit that they are mostly Nigerians. I had a close contact with most of them and had a case of a Mauritanian lady who claimed she was a Nigerian. Most of them claim to come from Edo State and when we speak the dialect to them, they do not understand and cannot respond. Most times, you find that she is an Aisha from Mauritania or Mali. There we took care of them and we had over 300 girls aged 13years and above. They usually cross from London, Belgium, Paris and Germany.”

    On her part, Peace believes that those who should be monitored are the men who bring the girls to Europe. “It is a huge cartel and we manage to speak to one of the madams who lived in Gardena, they made them go through rituals to deter them from talking. You find all kinds of incisions on their faces, their chests and they do these to secure protection. The money the girls were paying to the madams never got reduced. It became worse because the French guards treated them badly, maybe because they were blacks and sometimes used cigarette butts to burn their breasts and some sensitive parts before dumping them.”

    One of the strategies used by the girls for survival is to get married to some French nationals from places like Mali, Angola, Cameroun and Togo. “They reside in that side and those guys can marry two or three girls. So, I think that the Nigerian government should address the men that do this to our young girls. We know that there are some areas in Lagos where they keep the girls in a camp and they keep them there for two to three weeks or even months. Then they go through Togo and Ghana to export them because the Nigerian airport is very tight. Even when they deport some, they still find their way back.”

  • ‘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.