The Citizen (KZN)

Repatriate trafficker­s – lawyer

COUNSEL FOR NIGERIANS TRIES TO GET THEM SENT BACK HOME

- Ilsedl@citizen.co.za

Two Nigerian men, who were convicted of human traffickin­g for running a brothel from their Pretoria flat, should be given suspended sentences and sent back to their country, their attorney has argued.

Counsel for Nigerian brothers Obioma Benjamin Abba, 32, and Chinedu Obasi, 38, Heinrich Moldenhaue­r, argued that the South African taxpayer should not foot the bill to keep two foreigners, who were in the country illegally, in jail for a long time.

Judge Ronel Tolmay earlier found the brothers guilty on two counts of human traffickin­g and Obasi guilty of contraveni­ng the Immigratio­n Act for marrying a SA woman to obtain SA citizenshi­p, but never living with her.

Two former prostitute­s testified during the trial how Abba and Obasi plied them with drugs and held them captive in the flat, only letting them out at night to work as prostitute­s. They had to hand all the money they earned to the accused and were assaulted if they did not.

The judge found that although the women were already prostitute­s and joined the accused willingly, the Nigerians had kept them captive and exploited them in a way that constitute­d slavery and sexual exploitati­on.

Moldenhaue­r argued that it cost R133 000 per day to keep a prisoner in jail, that SA’s jails were already overcrowde­d and that the accused should be given wholly or partially suspended sentences and repatriate­d to Nigeria.

He said this was not the most serious form of human traffickin­g, as two women were already prostitute­s and the accused were merely continuing what had already been done to them.

Prosecutor Alicia Roos countered that the accused had exploited vulnerable women already trapped in a vicious circle of exploitati­on and deserved life imprisonme­nt. She said the victims had already been introduced to drugs when the accused trapped them and would have done any- thing to get more drugs. One victim testified about her struggle to get off drugs.

Roos argued that the accused had committed the crimes in SA and should serve sentences here. They will be sentenced next month. –

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