Slaves on our Streets: Tracking the route of human trafficking from Nigeria to Europe - and back again
At a safe house on the outskirts of
Lagos, Ed Cumming investigates the start of one of the most common trafficking
routes into the UK
-Ed Cumming Lagos, Nigeria
Priti
Patel meets a woman in the Lagos safe house. The Department for International
Development has pledged £7m to investigate how to combat trafficking between
Britain and Nigeria
"I was deceived," says
Sarah. "A woman came to our village and said I could make a lot of money
in Europe. I was very young, and I didn't know about anything. I wanted to
help my family, to pay for my schooling."
Sarah, now 29, is sitting in a bare
concrete room at a safe house run by Nigeria's National Agency for Prohibition
of Trafficking in Persons, or Naptip. It's an anonymous building surrounded by
a high fence, at the end of a dirt track, on the outskirts of Lagos. The exact
location is a secret, and Sarah isn't her real name.
When trafficked men and women are
picked up and identified - whether in Benin, or Niger, or Libya, or - as in
Sarah's case - on the sea, they are returned and kept here while the Naptip
counsellors help to prepare them to re-enter. There are around 60 men and women
in this poorly appointed facility.
It's estimated that 800,000
Nigerians are engaged in modern slavery around the world. Thousands end up in
the UK. According to the National Crime Agency Nigeria is the third most common
origin country for victims of modern slavery in Britain.
Others end up in Italy, or Spain, or
France. The story is the same all over. Victims are forced to work in appalling
conditions - beaten, starved, abused, stripped of their documentation and
dignity. More often than not they are forced into sex work. The first day of The
Independent's special investigation into modern slavery featured the story
of Abigail, a Nigerian raped and forced to work as a prostitute in London
before she escaped. Her story is far from unusual.
Sarah's story is common, too.
Her trafficker promised her passage to Europe and smuggled her up to Libya.
There, the trafficker reneged on the initial agreement and demanded more money,
and refused to give her her papers. Eventually Sarah thought she had found work
in Libya, cleaning for an Arab man, but he refused pay her and would turn
violent. Fleeing for her life, she finally found a boat, and it was there that
she was picked up, handed over to the Nigerian authorities and flown back to
Lagos. Her family still don't know she's returned.
Hearing the stories from the safe
house it's easy to get punch-drunk. Women promised work in bars, or even as
modelling, forced to work as prostitutes. Boys told they would be football
stars made to work on building sites until their bones break. At the Naptip
centre, medical treatment is available, as well as counselling and jobs
training, to make the victims less vulnerable to re-trafficking. Psychological
trauma is common.
Experts in modern slavery refer to
"push" and "pull" factors that lead people to fall victim
to human traffickers. Some are obvious: poverty, and the lack of opportunities
in rural Nigeria. Others are more complex. It is thought that 94 per
cent of victims of modern slavery come from Edo state, despite it only
being 2 per cent of Nigeria's population. As the Naptip director-general,
Julie Okah Donli, says, there it has become ingrained in the culture.
"Often the families will be
aware of what is happening," she explains. "And sometimes even the
victims might know they will work as prostitutes, but they won't
appreciate how bad the conditions will be." The "trolley" -
the woman who comes back to recruit young girls, will often have been
trafficked herself, and will be allowed to return on the condition that she
more girls in her place.
Witchcraft, or juju, is another
potent force. Before a girl leaves their village, they will go into the woods
with a witchdoctor, who'll perform a ceremony cursing her if she dares disobey
her traffickers. The girls might be stripped naked, or cut with a knife.
"Sometimes the priest is working with the traffickers," Donli
explains. "The ceremony will be filmed, to remind the girl, if she reaches
Europe, of the curse."
So embedded is the concept of
trafficking that some girls will work together and save up in order to find
themselves a trafficker. There is freedom of movement among neighbouring
sub-Saharan Africa, so in some cases no crime is committed until victims cross
the Libyan border. These grey areas – at precisely what point does someone
become a modern slave, for example – can make it hard for law enforcement.
The British government is committed
to stopping the supply. The NCA works directly with Nigerian agencies to share
information. The Independent visited the safe house with Priti Patel,
the Secretary of State for International Development, who heard Sarah's story
and spoke to staff about the challenges they face. Her department has pledged
£7m to investigate how to combat trafficking between Britain and Nigeria. But
there is a long way to go, and the problem is growing. There are 140 million
Nigerians, and the promise of a job – any job – at even a fraction of European
wages, remains a powerful lure.
"I'd have preferred to stay in
Nigeria," Sarah says at last, "but there is nothing here. There's
nobody to fight for me, so i had to fight for myself." Desperate and
without the right support, she was an obvious target for human traffickers.
With more than forty million estimated victims of modern slavery around the
world, there are many more Sarahs out there, hidden from view.
-INDEPENDENT
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