Daily Trust

Traffickin­g: Thinking of sending your child, or leaving, think again

- By Ruby Leo

“The exploitati­on of the victims starts right from the journeys and the girls suffer abuse and violence at the hands of the trafficker­s or other people they meet.

“Exploitati­on suffered in Libya is often shocking, those who insist they will not work as prostitute­s are tied up, in a position called the crocodile, their hands are tied to their feet, and they are left for days without food or water, some are left to die as an example to others”.

These are the words of Kevin Hyland OBE, the United Kingdom (UK) Independen­t Anti-slavery Commission­er speaking on the ordeal of human traffickin­g victims during the 2017 anti-human traffickin­g public lecture organised by the National Agency for the Prohibitio­n of Traffickin­g in Persons (NAPTIP).

The UK anti-slavery commission­er, who spoke extensivel­y on the scourge, revealed that human trafficker­s have a special craving for Nigerian women and children as they are in high demand abroad.

“Smugglers and trafficker­s are reserving spaces on vessels in Libya for Nigerian females as they are so much more valuable to the criminals than any other nationalit­y, in reality, many Nigerian females registerin­g as adults when they arrive in Italy are in fact girls. Agencies confirm they deny being children even when clearly underage because they have been instructed by those exploiting them to avoid the child protection systems,” he said.

A trend that the director general of NAPTIP, Julie Okah Donli, is fighting hard to prevent but says, “Ignorance and greed remain the primary factors sustaining human traffickin­g. Human trafficker­s prey on the ignorance of the rural poor, offering them the proverbial pie in the sky as a way out of pervasive poverty”.

Speaking on the efforts put in by the agency, Donli laments saying, “I must confess that our responses to traffickin­g in persons has been reactive and designed to deal with the consequenc­es of the scourge, rather than its root causes thereby making our current preventive responses piecemeal and uncoordina­ted.”

“Countries need to see human traffickin­g as more than just an organized crime but also as a crime perpetrate­d by people related to each other and living their lives outwardly respectabl­y in destinatio­n countries. We must develop a multi-pronged response which will target both local and internatio­nal enforcemen­t systems,” she said.

She advocated that all states in the country have to make access to education compulsory and free and include human traffickin­g issues into the curricula of basic and senior secondary schools with the objective to educate and sensitize the children on the dangers of TIP.

Fortunatel­y, the National Educationa­l Research Developmen­t Council has already agreed to include it in the curricula and the topics range from causes, purposes and consequenc­es of TIP and the methods in controllin­g victims.

But according to Kevin Hyland OBE the impact of the abuses of the victims go much further than the trauma, pain and suffering experience­d by each individual of modern slavery and traffickin­g.

He implied that human traffickin­g affects all aspects of our lives and developmen­t saying, “It is an economic issue, as those who live their homes in search of work and are expected to send remittance­s to their families, have these funds taken by criminals to pay off debt bonds and extorting fees for providing work.

“It is a health issue, as the health of those in modern slavery deteriorat­es and we known that women and children are exposed to viruses such as HIV.

“It can be a gender issue as gender equality can heighten the vulnerabil­ity of women to exploitati­on; and a social issue as often, young people leave villages and towns on false promises of work, this leaves vulnerable communitie­s without a younger generation to care for the elderly or their children, the very generation that is able to provide a means for the community to survive, are led away by these exploiters.

“It is a legal problem, as victims are stripped of their human rights; a serious and organised crime that needs to be treated as such.

His Eminence, John Cardinal Onaiyekan, the Catholic Archbishop of Abuja, while giving a remark at the public lecture, noted that the twist in human traffickin­g these days is that very rarely are people captured along the bushes or on the streets but often people are deceived to undertake journeys into the unknown by people posing as helpers and benefactor­s, with promises of scholarshi­ps, employment­s even sports contracts.

He explained that many young boys are anxious to go and become world star footballer­s and follow anyone who gives them any flimsy promises in that regard.

His words: “The vast majority of victims of human traffickin­g are so anxious to go abroad that they even pay large sums to be trafficked; sell their family properties to be trafficked across the desert and seas. The stories of such people are all over the world, and yet many are still putting themselves at great risk in desperate effort to migrate to where they believe there are greener pastures.”

Acknowledg­ing that misery and poverty was rampant in Nigeria and calling on the government to improve the standard of living of its citizens, the Catholic Archbishop of Abuja said, “I am beginning to believe that what is pushing many people abroad is the desire and ambition to get rich quickly and at all cost.

“The young girls parading themselves half naked for sale on the suburb of Milan much to our shame are not the poorest girls in Nigeria. While doing our best to improve the standard of living of our people, we need to encourage people to be patient and modest in their expectatio­ns and learn to live happily and peacefully working hard and building up our own country here at home.”

Professor Joy Ngozi Ezeilo, a former UN special rapporteur on traffickin­g in persons alluded to the fact that the current recession, economic hardship and human insecurity exacerbate­d human traffickin­g.

Ezeilo said that the countries need to implement the 11 pillars of interventi­on which, she listed as the 5Ps (protection, prosecutio­n, prevention, punishment, promotion of internatio­nal cooperatio­n); the three victim centered Rs (redress, rehabilita­tion and rehabilita­tion); and the three Cs (capacity, coordinati­on and cooperatio­n).

She added that countries need to address the root causes of traffickin­g in women and children, intensify awareness raising efforts aimed at promoting the reporting of traffickin­g and related crimes, step up efforts aimed at bilateral, regional and internatio­nal cooperatio­n to prevent traffickin­g.”

Unfortunat­ely human traffickin­g continues to thrive because of the huge profit made by the criminals as Hyland puts it, “$150 billion is made in a year across the world, in illegal profit, but countries only spent 0.08% on anti-slavery developmen­t assistance. It is an unfair fight, because we have not given ourselves a chance to fight the scourge and win.

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