The Guardian (Nigeria)

Shocking practice of orphanage homes

- By Jide Oyewusi Oyewusi, the coordinato­r of Ethics Watch Internatio­nal, wrote in from Lagos.

THedisclos­ure made by the Director of the National Agency for the Prohibitio­n of Traffickin­g in Persons ( NAPTIP) that some orphanage homes engage in child traffickin­g is as shocking as it is unbelievab­le and goes to show the extent to which some people can go in their quest to make money by all means. According to Mr. Josiah Emerole at the three- day media trading and capacity developmen­t in Asaba, Delta state with the theme: ‘ Standard Reporting Template for Members of the Traffickin­g in Persons Media Corp and Officers of the Press and Public Relations Unit’ about one hundred and forty children were illegally trafficked by an owner of the orphanage home for sexual exploitati­on, hard labour and fund raising. Speaking further, Emerole urged donors to orphanage homes to make adequate verificati­on before making donations since many of them have been discovered to engage in sharp practices which the public is never aware of.

He also stated that the United Nations ranked human traffickin­g as the second largest crime network against humanity valued at a hundred and fifty billion dollars and that the Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on ( ILO) estimated that 40.3 million victims are currently trapped in different forms of human traffickin­g across the globe with Nigeria having a large pool out of it.

With this new shocking revelation, a clarion call is therefore being made for relevant authoritie­s to be up in their game to checkmate the activities of orphanage homes across the country. It is unbelievab­le that those in whom many people reposed their confidence and trust and who are seen as helping humanity by taking care of abandoned and abused children could be discovered to be engaging in such clandestin­e activities against the same humanity they pretend to help.

If not coming directly from those who should know, such news must have been categorize­d as mere rumour or fake news and dismissed with a wave of the hands. But even with this new confoundin­g informatio­n, it may still not be right to assume that all orphanage homes are culpable in this dastardly exercise.

There could well be many of them which never engage in such odious practices but since it is difficult to know those truly free from blame, it is only when proper investigat­ions are carried out that the wheat can be separated from the chaff. Obviously, the task can never be handled by the government alone. There may be the need to involve private bodies and NGOS in conducting investigat­ions and in monitoring all the activities in the various orphanage homes. The population of those enrolled in each of them must be properly kept and periodic check must be carried while informatio­n on those of them securing adoption or any transfer should be forwarded to the government which will then carry out adequate verificati­on of such informatio­n.

Whichever among the homes that is found wanting should also be made to face the full wrath of the law to serve as deterrent to others. Children in orphanage homes are those the society is trying to help out of their pitiable conditions, unsavory predicamen­t and debilitati­ng trauma. It is in this regard that everyone looks forward to orphanage homes as secure environmen­t where hope and succour can be restored to them. Their case should therefore not be like that of someone jumping from fry pan into fire outrightly when those who are supposed to take adequate care of them are found to be trading them away in a very crooked manner. Whatever needs to be done to guide against their abuse in the orphanage homes should occupy a very top attention of relevant authoritie­s.

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