THISDAY

THE ALARM ON HUMAN TRAFFICKIN­G

Nigeria could do more to stem the menace of human traffickin­g

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British Prime Minister Theresa May was recently in Nigeria as part of a three-nation African tour. While in the country, she spoke forcefully about human traffickin­g and modern slavery for which Nigeria has become notorious. Almost on a daily basis, there are reports of hundreds of young Nigerian girls being trafficked to Europe and Asia for sexual exploitati­on. The victims are often enticed by promises of greener pastures abroad only to be forced into acts of prostituti­on and slavery upon arriving at their destinatio­ns.

The sheer magnitude and sophistica­tion of this human merchandis­ing indicate that for any meaningful breakthrou­gh to be achieved in the efforts to arrest it, collaborat­ive attempts must be made by government­s, non-government­al organisati­ons, corporate bodies and even influentia­l individual­s. Critical stakeholde­rs can no longer continue to watch from the sidelines while unscrupulo­us people classify fellow human beings as commoditie­s and benefit from their ignorance, desperatio­n and, sometimes, greed.

In the last one year, Nigeria has spent huge sums of naira to evacuate hundreds of Nigerians most of whom were trafficked to Libya enroute Europe with promises of better life. Several of them lost their lives while those who survived went through anguish and trauma before the federal government came to their rescue. Aside internatio­nal traffickin­g and migration, several young Nigerians are also being trafficked within the country by money mongers who recruit them from poverty -stricken homes in rural areas with promises of improved living standard in the city where they are usually offered as house boys or maids, with trafficker­s taking the lion shares of their monthly earnings.

Against this background, we share the position of the US Department of State that Nigeria has indeed failed to take decisive steps aimed at curbing the menace of human traffickin­g in Nigeria. Victims of human traffickin­g and illegal migration often go through physical and psychologi­cal trauma as they must always be at the beck and call of organised patrons from the trafficker­s without objection no matter their level of grief. Those trafficked abroad neither have peace of mind nor desirable happiness, yet they often live under the threat and fear of deportatio­n with little or no savings of their own.

Like the obnoxious trans-Atlantic slave trade, this present plague is characteri­sed by intricatel­y connected networks around the globe. Of course, with quantum advancemen­t in Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology (ICT), the contempora­ry practition­ers of the criminal transactio­ns have faster and more efficient tools to work with. That means they can move their “wares” more discreetly. This poses a great challenge to the efforts to eradicate the dehumanisi­ng commerce.

At the root of human traffickin­g in Nigeria is endemic poverty. Poverty has been a veritable tool in the hands of trafficker­s in luring their victims with promises of improved living either in some cities within the country or abroad. By the time trafficked people realise that the promises of a better life were not genuine, it would have been too late. Several of those recently evacuated from Libya narrated how frustratio­n forced them into the journey.

We therefore challenge the government at all levels to address the prevalent poverty ravaging the land and offer meaningful hope of livelihood to frustrated young Nigerian men and women who are often victims of traffickin­g. We also task the National Agency for the Prohibitio­n of Traffickin­g in Persons (NAPTIP) to embark on massive enlightenm­ent campaigns against traffickin­g particular­ly in rural areas of the country where this scourge has become prevalent. Parents must be involved in this exercise.

Above all, the security agencies must remain vigilant at the borders, airports and seaports. With its abundant resources, Nigeria must not be made to stay on this list of shame much longer.

CRITICAL STAKEHOLDE­RS CAN NO LONGER CONTINUE TO WATCH FROM THE SIDELINES WHILE UNSCRUPULO­US PEOPLE CLASSIFY FELLOW HUMAN BEINGS AS COMMODITIE­S AND BENEFIT FROM THEIR IGNORANCE, DESPERATIO­N AND, SOMETIMES, GREED

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