Stella Dimoko Korkus.com: Nigeria’s Ruthless Human Trafficking Mafia Exposed By Tobore Ovuorie

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Friday, January 24, 2014

Nigeria’s Ruthless Human Trafficking Mafia Exposed By Tobore Ovuorie



OH MY GOD!

If you thought the prostitution mafia in Nigeria is a figment of any ones imagination then you need to read this shocking real life tale of a Journalist who pretended to be a prostitute and almost got beheaded as she watched others killed....she became a 'prostitute' to bring you this story...it is shocking..Please leave the other stories and read this!

Here goes.....

“Our trafficker, Mama Caro, welcomes us in flawless English, telling us how lucky and special we are; then she ushers us to a room where we are to sleep on the floor without any dinner.”


It had all started in Abuja, with me deciding to expose the human traffic syndicates that caused the death, through Aids, of my friend Ifuoke and countless others. 

As a health journalist, I had interviewed several returnees from sex traffic who had not only been encouraged to have unprotected sex, but who had also been denied health care or even to return home when they fell ill. They were now suffering from Aids, anal gonorrhea, bowel ruptures and incontinence.





 In the case of some of them, who hailed from conservative religious backgrounds, doctors in their home towns had denied them any treatment because they had been ‘bad’. I was also aware that powerful politicians and government and army officials, who outwardly professed religious purity, were servicing and protecting the traffickers.I wanted to break through the hypocrisy and official propaganda and show how, every day, criminals in Nigeria are helped by the powerful to enslave my fellow young citizens. 


My colleagues had done undercover work before; they had warned me of the risks, but had agreed to support me in my decision to go through with it. With my colleagues, and with the help of ZAM Chronicle, we then started in earnest.
“I wanted to break through the hypocrisy and official propaganda and show how, every day, criminals in Nigeria are helped by the powerful to enslave my fellow young citizens.”



Oghogho
I had advertised my wish to get to know a ‘madam’ whilst walking the streets of Lagos, dressed as a call girl.It worked. I had met Oghogho Irhiogbe, an accomplished, well-groomed graduate in her thirties (though she claimed to be only 26), and a wealthy human trafficker of note. 


My lucky hunch to tell her that my name was ‘Oghogho’ too had immediately warmed her to me. She told me I looked like her kid sister and from then on treated me like a favourite.
“Don’t worry about crossing borders and getting caught,” she had told me. “Immigration, customs, police, army and even foreign embassies are part of our network. You only run into trouble with them if you fail to be obedient to us.” I already knew this to be true. 



Two of the trafficked sex workers I had interviewed had tried to find help at Nigerian embassies in Madrid and Moscow, only to realise that the very embassy officials from whom they had sought deportation had immediately informed their pimps. They had eventually made it back to Nigeria only after they had developed visible diseases, such as AIDS-related Kaposi sarcoma.


Oghogho Irhiogbe had been luckier. She owned four luxury cars, two houses in Edo State, and was busy completing the building of a third house near the Warri airport in Delta State. 

Others I had met through my initial ‘call girl’ exploits were clearly on their way to riches, too. Priye was set to go back to the Netherlands, where she worked before, to become a ‘madam’. Ivie and Precious were quite happy to go back to Italy. Precious had already made enough money to start building her own house in Enugu, halfway between Abuja and Port Harcourt.




Forza Speciale
It is on the windy Sunday evening of October 6 that I make my first contact with the outer ring of this mafia. A big party with VIPs is on the cards; the kind of party an ordinary girl, or rather ‘product’, as we are called by traffickers, is not usually invited to. But I am currently on a fortune ride as Oghogho’s favourite. 


Additionally, I have been classified as ‘Special Forces’, or ‘Forza Speciale’ as my new contacts say, borrowing the Italian term. It’s a rule of thumb, I understand, that a syndicate subjects girls to classification through a check on their nude bodies and I, too – in the company of some male and female judges, headed by a trafficker called Auntie Precious – had been checked. I had received the highest classification. “This means that you don’t have to walk the streets. You can be an escort for important clients,” Auntie Precious had told me in a soft, congratulatory tone. The ones of ‘lesser’ classification were referred to as Forza Strada, the Road Force.



The party is held at a gorgeous residence along the Aguiyi Ironsi Way in Maitama, Abuja. This is designed to be a festive end to a great day, in which we went to church, hung out at the choicest places in town, shopped and got dressed in a suite at the Abuja power citadel, meeting point of the elite, the Transcorp Hilton.



It is more like an orgy. Male and female strippers entertain guests, drugs abound, alcohol is everywhere in unrestrained flow; there is romping in the open. Also, big bags of money are changing hands. Barely an hour after we arrive, Oghogho receives a big jute bag, which is delivered from another room. As we walk out and she puts the money in the boot of her car, she smiles at me. 

“Don’t worry; very soon, you’ll get to receive dividend.” This ‘dividend’ is not from prostitution and trafficking alone, but Oghogho won’t tell me what the other source is. “When you come on board fully, you’ll know.”



A retired army colonel from the Abacha era sees to it that we are not disturbed. “He has top connections and sees to a smooth flow of the business,” Oghogho tells me.



Pickpocketing training
How ‘top’ these connections are, I find when I am taken with a group of girls to be trained in pickpocketing. We, a group of ten ‘products’, are placed at various crowded bus stops in the suburb of Ikorodu, where we must ‘practice’ under the guard of two army officers, a policeman as well as a number of male ‘trainers’. 
The policeman doesn’t even bother to cover his name badge: Babatunde Ajala, it reads.



The general operation is supervised by Mama Caro, popularly called Mama C, a 50-something, light-complexioned, busty woman. Her deputy is a Madam Eno. Mama C has told us that pickpocketing is a crucial skill for the Forza Speciale: we will need to be able to pick valuables from clients. She adds that the pickings are added to the girls earnings, so we will be able to pay off our debts– commonly called ‘meeting our targets’ – in a short time.


When I perform dismally, Eno rains abuses on me. We are all to stay at the bus stop until I pick an item from somebody. It is already 11 PM.Tired, hungry and angry with me, Adesuwa, Isoken and the policeman guarding my group pick some extra pockets and hand me the items, so that I can show them to Eno.



The next day, the bumpy journey to the ‘training camp’ appears endless. My fellow ‘products’ are snoozing and I battle to stay awake, wondering if we are tired or drugged. I note the bus moving off the main road somewhere around Odogunyan, into thick bushes, almost a forest.We stop at a compound guarded by armed military men. As my fellow ‘products’ wake up, it is clear that they think we are still in Lagos.



New names and indenture
The next day starts with strip tease and lap dance training after breakfast, and thereafter poise and etiquette. Five other girls have arrived in the meantime. They are all graduates, leaving for Italy fully aware of what they are to do there. “If I get caught by local police, I will just tell them I was trafficked against my will,” one of them, Gbemi, says light-heartedly. “I don’t think oyinbo (white man) will believe Mama C if she says that I am there voluntarily.”



I receive a crash course in pedicure and manicure because I am so bad at pickpocketing. “You’ll be utilizing these skills at my wellness centre in Italy,” Mama C says, after scolding me for being lazy and testing her patience. “You will be working on only men whilst wearing sexy dresses. That will enable you to attract customers.”


Later, Mama C makes everyone sign a statement that they have willingly embarked on the journey and that they are to return certain sums as professional fees to her. No girl is given a copy of what she has signed and the amount varies inexplicably: while Isoken signs up for a debt of US $100,000, I will have only US $70,000 to pay. We are told that we will receive new passports with false names and even false nationalities in Cotonou. I am to become a Kenyan, Mairo South African, and so on. “I have boys in the Benin immigration office,” boasts Mama C.



Horror
A just-arrived traditional ‘doctor’ then puts us through rites that involve checking the horoscope of each girl as well as collecting some of her blood, fingernails, hair and pubic hair. He then picks out four of us as ‘problematic’ and says we will bring ‘bad luck’. Either he is really clairvoyant or he is a professional security operative who has run background checks on us, because he is right about at least three of the four. Two of us have had unfortunate earlier experiences involving deportation back to Nigeria and are possibly known to the authorities in Europe. I am number three.



What happens next is like a horror movie.

As we ‘unlucky’ four, are standing aside, Mama C talks with five well-dressed, classy, influential-looking visitors.The issue is a ‘package’ that Mama C has promised them and that she hasn’t been able to deliver. The woman points at me, but Mama C refuses and for unexplained reasons Adesuwa and Omai are selected. We all witness, screaming and trying to hide in corners, as they are grabbed and beheaded with machetes in front of us. The ‘package’ that the visitors have come for turns out to be a collection of body parts. The mafia that holds us is into organ traffic, too.



With all of us trembling and crying, I and the other three ‘unsuitable’ ones are herded into a separate room. Mama C comes later to take me to yet another room for questioning. Angry beyond measure, she whips me all night, telling me to yield information on the ‘forces’ protecting me. “You are going nowhere,” she keeps shouting. “I have invested too much in you!”


Clearing the ‘spirit’
The next morning Mama C eats her breakfast while I starve: I have last eaten the previous morning. When she finished, and whilst the ‘approved products’ leave for Cotonou, Benin, to commence their journey to Italy, Mama C takes us four ‘unsuitables’ to visit three new, different ‘doctors’: one in the Agege neighbourhood of Lagos, the second in rural Sango Ota village and the third in remote Abeokuta in Ogun State. She clearly believes in traditional ‘medicine’ and is desperate to find a treatment for the ‘demons’ we are said to carry.


The first two ‘doctors’ agree with the first one that I am bad news, but the third, after roughly cutting off most of my hair, declares me free from the ‘spirit’. The ‘evil spirits’ in the other three girls, meanwhile, have been ‘beaten out of them’ with dry whips. Back at the camp the first ‘doctor’ rages at Mama C for approving me, insisting that the ‘doctor’ who ‘freed me from the spirit’ is a fraud. 


“This girl will bring about your downfall! You will end up in jail!” I am all the more convinced that he possesses not supernatural powers, but certain information.The syndicates are well-connected and someone may have told him that I am not who I say I am. The ‘doctor’ keeps repeating that ‘forces’ are protecting me. But Mama C insists that she is not to lose her investment.


Meanwhile, new ‘products’ have arrived to pass through the rites that night. The whole camp is again in the grip of fear as chilling screams indicate that some of the new arrivals – two girls and a young man, I learned later – are also murdered.


“Oghogho, I wonder what actually brought you here. I never expected a girl like you to venture into this,” says one of Mama C’s errand boys, as he enters the room I had again been locked in later that night with a plate of food.He seems well disposed to me. “You found and returned my Blackberry that I lost during one of the pickpocketing training sessions,” he explains.


 I had not realised the escort whose phone I found had been this boy; then, he had worn a cap pressed deep into his eyes. “Other girls would just have kept my phone,” he says. “You don’t belong here.I keep wondering what level of poverty has made you endanger yourself. You don’t deserve this.”
The plate of food is all I need to get my strength back. We are to travel the following morning.



Escape
As we are about to leave, I lose my phone to the army officer. Searching all of us, he has taken Isoken’s phone already and she has pointed at me to divert attention from herself, saying I had a phone too. He takes mine at gunpoint.I can only thank the heavens that it is dead. I had been upset because it didn’t charge the previous night, but the fact that it won’t switch on is my second lucky break: it has a lot of pictures and conversations I have recorded in the camp. 


The disadvantage of losing my phone is that I can’t contact our colleague Reece, who is to help me once I get to Cotonou. I also can’t communicate with my editors back in Nigeria.


All along the road leading up to the border, police and customs officers wave and greet Madam Eno and our head of operations, Mr James. Nigerian Immigrations and Customs officers also greet us warmly at the border post itself, whilst enquiring if there is anything in it for them today.

“Welcome, Madam! How have sales been?”
Eno: “Not much.”
“But your batch was allowed entry yesterday, so why claim you haven’t been making sales? “
Eno: “We are not the owner of yesterday’s batch of girls. We own these ones in this bus.”
“Haaa!You want to play a smart one? Not to worry, your boss will sort all this out with us.”


The officers then wave the minibus through without any form of documentation.
The original plan was for me to go with the transport as far as Cotonou, the capital of our neighbouring country Benin. But I didn’t want to stretch it any longer. The border is usually very crowded and I planned to escape as soon as we are there.

 It works. Just after the Seme border post, in front of a crowded, muddy market, I run. Merging with the crowd, I take my top off – I have another top under it – and cover my head with a scarf. The army officer is following me, looking for me. I dive into a store and lose him.


I travel the twenty kilometres from the border motor park to Cotonou by minibus taxi.Colleague Reece – alerted by a phone call the driver helps make to her to ensure that she will be there to pay him – will wait for me there. Upon arrival, I see a woman I recognise from her Facebook photo. “Reece?”“Tobore!” She cries and holds out her arms to catch me. “I am safe.”



After her miraculous escape near Cotonou, Tobore meets Beninese Journalist, Reece who was on hand to help her recover from the shock of close shave with death.

I get out of my car and look among the people at the bus stop for someone resembling Tobore’s photo. But the short, skinny creature in jeans with the head scarf recognises me first. “It's Reece?” The girl looks lost and terrified. I embrace her and help her into my car. As soon as she sits down she bursts into tears. She takes her scarf off and reveals a practically bald head with only a few tufts of hair. “Reece, they cut me, they cut my hair”, she repeats. For the rest of the day, and the days thereafter, she keeps crying, with an empty look in her eyes that drives me mad with worry. What kind of a journalistic assignment has this been?



The doctor, whom we visit to get treatment for her bruises, as well as some pain killers, calmants and sleeping tablets, takes me aside after seeing Tobore. “Please take good care of her. This girl has seen the devil. She is in shock and needs time to recover.” As her colleagues in Nigeria and Evelyn in Amsterdam help plan for Tobore’s return to Nigeria, I note down what I know about human traffic in my town, Cotonou, for the purposes of this story.



Education fees
It is no secret that daily, girls from other countries enter my town to either work here in the red light district of Jonquet, or to be trafficked onward to other places. Most do this voluntarily as prostitution is legal in Benin. A Ghanaian girl, Gift, has told me she relies on sex work to feed and educate her two children back in Ghana.  Her pimp apparently gets her good customers. ‘Tourists, businessmen, the hotels phone us to service them.’  Nigerian Adesio, in her thirties, says she was lucky to become the girlfriend of a trafficker who set her up in a nice apartment and helped her find VIP clients. “But he started to beat me up after a year and then I decided to run, change my identity and begin again as an independent. Another lover helped me to do that.”


At Benin’s University premises, ‘Club U’ helps local girls to put themselves through school. “If you look good, male students involved in the business will approach you on campus and offer you a job”, law student Ingrid (19) tells us. “I am an orphan. I work here three years now and it pays for my food and shelter as well as my studies.  We have good clients: celebrities, parliamentarians and executives.”

Though many girls complain of lack of access to health care, abuse by lovers and pimps and harassment by police –who often take them in under a pretext and force them to have sex with them for free; the worst ones even take the earnings they have on them-, I have not yet encountered any woman held as a slave, unable to escape.


After listening to Tobore, however, I can’t help wondering what way out there is in Cotonou for a girl who, even if she set out to travel willingly, has come to realise that she has made a mistake. Are there criminals in my town who hold women against their will? If so, what are the authorities here doing to help them?  Where can a girl run to?



The fight stops at the border
I interview the police commissioner, but he tells me there is no such thing as forced human traffic. “These girls are all here voluntarily. We don’t need a rescue programme.” A contact at the Nigerian embassy is of the same view: ‘they’ are here out of their own volition and the embassy has never been presented with a request for help. I wait for an hour at the Ghanaian embassy without finding anyone willing to comment.



So, whilst millions of US$ are budgeted by the authorities in our next door country, Nigeria, to stop human traffic, much of which goes to Benin, there is no such effort in Benin at all.  This raises the question how serious the Nigerian authorities are. Being the bigger and richer neighbour they could easily demand action from the Benin government.  But apparently, unlike the human traffic itself, the Nigerian fight against human traffic stops at the Nigerian border.


After a few days of rest, medical care, good food and shopping for new outfits, a phone and a wig, Tobore has recovered sufficiently to make the trip back to her home country. Dressed as a market woman, with flowering blue boubou, matching blue scarf and comfortable market slippers, my friends and I wave her back through the Seme border.

I can only hope the story was worth it. culled from premium times

117 comments:

  1. Bravo! Everyday for the thief, one day for the owner. Useless people!

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    1. Quite chilling.

      Is there no way these women can be caught?

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    2. Omg!!!!!
      This gehl is truly a journalist......I pray they don't hunt her down for this.....kai

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    3. Story too long,kindly summarise,madam journalist did u f**k or not?because this ur undercover na wa

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    4. Anon 4:31.. u r just a fool. 'too long'.. did u not read books in school? Y r some people scared to read for goodness sake! U must be a dunce.. hope u dont pass it on to ur kids

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    5. Truth, they say, is often stranger than fiction! This reads like a horror story. With her identity out there, I hope she's not in danger as a result of this!

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    6. This lady really took risk!whatt!
      I am so disappointed at our system,corruption has eaten deep into pple.
      I have a close family member in the immigration and he's so passionate abt his job,he tells me how he tries to expose,(so they can be closed down thru the immigration office approval) major brothels that organise trafficking and prostitution,hmmm!but the point is,once tthe case reaches his bosses,it dies a natural death!those syndicates,brothels and all are still having a ball!yes nothing happened to them!
      These pple truely have a lot of loyalists in the military and paramilitary.
      This is a sweet exposure',but the sad and bitter thing will be dat nothing might be done to them.

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  2. Nice one......dem catch d thief.....

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    1. Goose Pimples all over my body, is this for real?

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    2. Wat a huge risk! My goodness u are a journalist and not an under cover cop! She could have died! On top everytin u cudnt arrest them! My dear u are not nikita!

      I don't copy and paste my gist.
      And comments are auto comment! No need to wait for approval

      click here supremacydone.blogspot.com

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  3. Replies
    1. I'd have thought this would be right up your alley okpolo eyes. Mwahahahaha

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  4. Huh! Too long a story though, human trafficking is a violation of human right n freedom. Modern day slavery @ its peak all in a bid t make ends meet. God help us all t do sth positive wt our lives!

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    1. I'm sure u didnt read it. Olodo rabata

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    2. Fat fool with an empty plate.

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    3. Hahahah Lepa shandy is back...where av u bn? Finally u were able to load ur fone, huh!

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  5. This sent shivers down my spine. May God protect ds journalist cos I'm certain they're still on her case.

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  6. I just gave a thought to all these;we are the "problem" and we are also the "change".
    Most times the government shouldn't be blamed.Who are the government if I may ask?U and I....Most girls would rather become "Runs Girls" or "Traffickers" than learn trade.
    They think its the fastest way to accumulate financial and material wealth.I read a Book where an NGO gave out soft loans for Prostitutes to learn trade or handiwork,guess what some of the Beneficiaries said "We no fit waste 1 month take learn work" Meaning, they don't appreciate the magnanimity offered by a selfless NGO.....The way to Destruction is Sweet and Flexy...But the way to Happiness takes one step at a time.
    A better tomorrow is Feasible;it begins with U and I.

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    Replies
    1. You have said it all my darling.
      Mrs Aguwa

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    2. hehehehehe Mr n Mrs Agunwa

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    3. Your head ennnnnnnnnnnn, dey there, I beg chip knuckle.

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    4. Oh,I wish dia was a like button,u said it all

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    5. Lol at sweet and flexy

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  7. Tobore should be highly commended . That girl is a true heroine and an amazing journalist. I can't believe she put herself through such danger to help bring to light the plight of forced human trafficking. I mean she escaped death twice! Wow. God was truly on her side. I doff my hat to her.

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  8. Hmm... so this is what those desperate Edo,Delta and Igbo girls go through in the name of going to Europe to prostitute. Na wao

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    Replies
    1. Ur very foolish

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    2. Asin! Foolish beyond comprehension!

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    3. @Ogbanje! You better change this name.

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    4. I don't get what the insults hurled @ogbanje is about, obviously, the reference is not to all the tribes mentioned, that would be ridiculous.
      But it's a notorious fact that these tribes have come to accept prostitution abroad. Not that other tribes don't prostitute but we know what ogbanje means.
      Let's collaborate for success and stop attacking people that tell the obvious truth.

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    5. i hate obganje but she is right....Edo tops the list and families even raise money for their daughters to go do prostitution abroad.....am Ishan and i dont give a rat arse what anybody thinks but that is the gospel truth....no apologies

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  9. Hmmmm! This is very scary, things are happening o.

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  10. I lack words........
    John 11:35.....thus is one if the reason he did,human beings are indeed wicked.
    Hardly will you see animal treating themselves this way....
    Greed for vain things....money money money!!,like it's going with you when you die!
    Such Evil!!!!!...
    My path has been guided by the Holy Spirit and such evil can never cross or perceive my glory even from a zillion miles away...
    People should learn to FEAR GOD

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  11. Wow! Bravery is the word for Tobore. Am speechless! Top shots involved. I hope they all can be arrested and persecuted. But somehow I doubt, since they are making it clear that the girls enter into it voluntarily...omg! What can be done?
    This is bad! Wow! Crazy! Jeez!
    Pls tobore and recee' safety should be guaranteed.

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  12. my o my! i cant belive my eyes.so these things really happen?please we ladies and gents should take thngs suffry.i know a lot of nigerians in suffering.dats why i better continue to stays here in abroad.one love to my one and only M-amie

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  13. Stella, you are the best for bringing this to our notice through your blog! Are you sure this is for real? I cant believe this is going on in Nigeria. If our girls do this and go through this dangerous things willingly, then we are doomed in this country! I say today is the saddest day of my life. Kudos to Kobore! What a fantastic investigative journalism!!! We need more people like her to bring out this horrible deeds going on in our society, I just hope this will not be a wasted effort and the authorities will take up this challenge to move against human trafficking. Kudos to all that worked on this matter!!!

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  14. Hmmm, what a world we live in.

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  15. OMG!!!!....this is scary....Edo people no dey carry last for this kain thing... Thank God she came out alife...too risky..

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    1. Linda,tobore nah delta geh,dis story is so creepy i swear.all in d name of money!! Dis women don rily sell deir soul 2 d devil.GOD ABEG

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  16. So what is been done to the cartel?
    Thought we were going to hear that!!
    Really it's not trafficking if they went on their own volition

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    Replies
    1. Hope the story was worth it. Now I'm wondering if she had to have sex to protect her identity and again with all the cutting and blood they collected ifshe has been infected...hope it will all be worth it in the end. Chilling story

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  17. YOU REALLY TOOK A BIG RISK BUT THANK THE ALMIGHTY THAT YOU WERE ABLE TO SURVIVE IT.

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  18. Hello my people abeg them don give me and my hubby visa 4 uk and we won spend 1-2weeks 4 uk and we donot want to stay in a hotel but apartments! Do u an idea of best (affordable o) place to stay in d uk(area and if u v any contact or processes) , I don use google but na so so big price we dey see n d we are not conversant with d area! Abeg help! *uk visa*

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    Replies
    1. U will be most welcome to Mama Charlie's country. Don't you have family and friends who could help you? Since you are talking about cost, Google bed and breakfast. They are usually cheaper. What do u need apartment for? Except u want to be cooking your own food. Welcome to Londre as the French man would say! I love England but I miss naija. Lol

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    2. You will be bored out of your skull. Better stay with relation at least they will show you where to go when they are not working.

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    3. I can accompdate you for two weeks for 150 pounds, if you are willing to sleep in the sitting room and not being too many visitors to my house. I'm a mum of two children.

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    4. Wn I travelled with my hubby n kids we stayed in an apartment @ Great Portland Street in central London and it ws a hundred pounds per day. If u are interested I'll give u d details. Their accommodation is very comfortable infact like ur home.

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    5. Try staycity apartments (staycity.com) it's cheaper if you book ahead u're not staying in central london.... You can apt as from £45...

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    6. Why should someone pay 150 pounds to sleep in your parlour?

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    7. Beaufort park in Collindale. Google it. Or drop your email address so I can send contact details. They have even studio apartments, close to d tube, shops and restaurants in same Estate

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    8. As in d fake chillysauce? Impersonating d real " chillisauce" of NL? Lol...

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    9. Which place did you tell d embassy that you were going to and got a visa? Go there and stay!

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    10. Sorry, there's a patented 'chillisauce'? What's NL?

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  19. Sadly,this industry will be never be successfully shut down.Too many powerful interest & corruption fuels it clearly.Peterside F.K

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  20. *Exhales a large amount of CO2* Ife na-eme oh!

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  21. *Exhales large amount of CO2** Ife na-eme mehn!

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  22. Adesuwa, Ifueko, Oghogho, what the Hell is wrong with Bini girls? ( pardon my language).

    Oh I know! I really do. GREED? FAMILY PRESSURE, ILLITRACY, JELOUSY, POVERTY.

    I remembered when magnificent, houses started springing up in the old, ancient, dusty ordinary streets of Benin in the late 1980"s, early 1990's.

    Not forgetting the shining wonders -on - wheels. Still with Italian plate numbers hurling sands and dust at haters/admirers everyday.

    These ladies were Early Italianos who were displaying their new found wealth. The only public information about them was ABROAD BASED BUSINESS WOMEN.

    Mostly, hair saloon owners. So when they come for you, sister, aunty, niece , daughter or wife to be exported, you felt "privileged" and "chosen".

    The hush and whispers of prostitution was still a myth. A rumour. They will export anyone else except their daughters. They lied and deceived a lot of women then.

    Now, right now, parents and husbands beg Italianos for exportation. The risks are far from thier minds. Just wanna live in sprawling edifices, ride the latest Phantoms and Western Union thier lives.

    Mrs Eki Igbinedion tried to stop Human Trafficking by flagging the Idia Renaissance. For rehabilitating deportees and youths in Benin.

    For those who were pressured...my sympathy and for those who volunteered, Education is still the key.

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    Replies
    1. A million likes to this. The story s really a sad one.

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    2. eki egbinidion was one of them who was involved in the business those days so what are u talking about....the idia thing was just an initiative to justify govt funding......the lady mechanic - sandra had a boyfriend back then in festac who used to take girls abroad too.......

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  23. Omg!!! Tinz hapen o,,,,where do we start frm? God help us all.

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  24. Too long. Wow dis ppl re nt owk I swr. I wonder whether dey don't av kids or families. God av mercy. Sir alpachino.

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  25. Too long. Wow dis ppl re nt owk I swr. I wonder whether dey don't av kids or families. God av mercy. Sir alpachino.

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  26. Too long. Wow dis ppl re nt owk I swr. I wonder whether dey don't av kids or families. God av mercy. Sir alpachino.

    ReplyDelete
  27. Its almost impossible to stop human trafficking in Nigeria. Most Nigerians are so deeply corrupt and will do anything for money. These Nigerians are also so heartless and immune to human suffering; nothing moves them. It is these same Nigerians who are working for police, customs, immigration and other govt agencies. It is also these type of people who go and hustle for politics, union post, military etc. They end up being top politicians, govt officials, military officers, police commissioners etc. So why won't everything be corrupt? Smh

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  28. I'm afraid that nothing will come of this brave reporter's ordeal. the embassy and the "government officials" are all in on it.

    ReplyDelete
  29. I hope she's gonna be safe after this? I hope that isn't her real name up there? Jesus Christ. I'm so shocked. Things are happening.

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  30. God help us! Some ladies willingly sign up for prostitution, I just dnt get it sha.. Nobody will eva find out wat happened to those ones dat were beheaded cos most of them propably didn't tell any1 where they were going...God will always have mercy on his children

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  31. This story is just toooooo sad. some humans are just cruel wicked. I weep for those innocent girls. For Tobore I thank God almighty for protecting you. Abeg next time don´t take that kind of risk, this one alsost caused you your life. Even with this exposure, they will still not be persecuted, they have enough money to spread around. As for those politicians claiming they are fighting human trafickers eg Eki igbinedion and Titi Atiku may God forgive their hypocracy. They made themselves billions with no tangible accomplishemet whatsoever

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  32. Jesus help us
    This world has ended, imagine all the way from abuja to lagos to benin e.t.c
    I'm even shocked sef
    I don't know what to say
    I'm not even making sense
    Stella is this a movie
    Because for a second there I thought I was actually inside a play
    Oh Lord, why would anyone want to suffer like this
    Poverty is a bastard
    Pls ild come back to comment
    My head is even hurting

    ReplyDelete
  33. Hmm, this story is very scary and sad…Really???

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  34. Wow,this is so horrible. indeed human wickedness surely surprises the devil sometimes.I`m a journalist by profession but I definitely dont have the courage to embark on a journey like this. Kudos to you and I hope your experience saves atleast a situation somewhere...it`s a must read for all,nothing lasts forever,sadly there seem to be no end to such crimes cuz even if these people are caught,another group will rise.God please we need a miracle...please.
    Princess T

    ReplyDelete
  35. Sadly, nothing will be done about this.
    The authorities won't search for these people

    ReplyDelete
  36. Okereke e mean say u no get any oda job wey u dey do? 247 ur life and job na dis blog. Must u comment on evertin wey stella post? Abeg try luk 4 work mak u keep urself busy....hahahahah

    ReplyDelete
  37. Okereke e mean say u no get any oda job wey u dey do? 247 ur life and job na dis blog. Must u comment on evertin wey stella post? Abeg try luk 4 work mak u keep urself busy....hahahahah

    ReplyDelete
  38. Okereke e mean say u no get any oda job wey u dey do? 247 ur life and job na dis blog. Must u comment on everytin wey stella post? Abeg try luk 4 work mak u keep urself busy....hahahahah

    ReplyDelete
  39. Sadly nothing may come out of this investigation except people clamour or cause a serious stir about it. (Remember the ejigbo pepper sellers) these cartel have people placed in power. As sad as it sounds we live in a country where you are totally on your own. God help us

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  40. Almost incredible to believe!.cos I don't think it's this bad but God this is a terrible experience. Hopefully she goes for spiritual cleansing cos a lot has been taken away from her. Can't even imagine this kinda stupid assignment that she put her life in danger like this, if she had died na "sara" she for be n no one will say anything, not even her bosses. "Na gone too soon" dem for they talk for her matter now. I doubt with all her trouble, any justice will be done b cos THIS IS NIGERIA!!! Enough said.

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  41. Wow!!! I've got goose bumps all over me, reading this.

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  42. @ Lepa Orobo, too long a story indeed. Shey the story should have been abridged for your sake? Lazy Ass. Next time if a post is too long for you, just continue to the next short piece.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Abi o... 'put a secret in a book and a black man will not find it'. how can someone be complaining that such an interesting story is too long? This extreme stupidity n laziness baffles me.

      Delete
    2. Like seriously, very annoying. That's one thing I hate to read...the too long complaints. Haba. What will it cost these lazy asses to bloody read? What? Yet they are first to comment without any tangible contribution except to make the thread unnecessarily long for others. Smh

      Delete
  43. In shock! The journalist deserves an Award, for the risk she took. Had goose bumps reading through the passage.
    Just speechless at the moment.. hmmm,wonders they say never End.

    ReplyDelete
  44. Benin and ashawo, really tired of hearing their stories concerning their fradulent n promiscous life styles::::greedy mofos. Am happy the girl survived, she shd be careful cos they will still be after her. God have mercy smh.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Princess Charming24 January 2014 at 21:38

      LOL I tell you. Smh

      Delete
  45. In as much has I applaud Tobore's effort,is it really worth it? Nigeria 4 what it is would soon sweep ds matter under the carpet. Tobore's life n dt of her family isn't safe,she's gon b running looking over her shoulder 4 d rest of her life. None of d madams or high profiled clients were caught,so is it really worth it going thru all this? Thank God she's alive,but I advice she channels her energy into something else,don't cut ur life short cuz u wanna prove there is human trafficking going on in the country.Good job I must confess,but ur life is more important.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. it should be 'in as much as'. Pls write English correctly.

      Delete
    2. Can't you differentiate wrong English from typographical error?
      Over sabi!

      Delete
    3. Frances, dont be stupid! This is not the first time I have seen this mistake. Do not blame everything on typo. My colleague writes the same way. The letter H is not close to the letter A on any keyboard. So FYI... it is as much as. U better take correction

      Delete
  46. Did I just watched a horror movie, with all d trappings of a ruthless Itallian Mafia?Or was that a nightmare?I'm sweating profusely n shivering! Pls somebody shld give me a seat n some water.And a strong analgesic. Where am I really? Pls I want to go home!....calls 911.

    ReplyDelete
  47. Iv got goose bumps all over. I lost my cousin a few years ago,she was in mali.
    I hope that these culprits are caught and severely dealt with. Real close shave for Tobore- thank God no serious injury ws inflicted on her.

    Hadeeba

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  48. There is also local sex trafficking.... And the story above is similar... These girls are held in bondage (made swear at a shrine) and they have union! It is a serious cabal. When you have an encounter with them, that you will know the highly connected

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  49. Amy E get state wey prostitution no dey? Which one be benin and ashewo? Abeg learn how to talk o.....

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  50. Amy E get state wey prostitution no dey? Which one be benin and ashewo? Abeg learn how to talk o.....

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Ashawo dey everywhere for Naija. You fit argue say ashawo business na the biggest employer of women for Naija! Consider all the brothels, street hawkers, club girls, campus runz girls, aristos, cash madam etc.

      Delete
  51. Human traficking from Nigeria to Europe wit
    its headquarter in Benin, Edo state ain't new
    to nobary. 98% of the said girls voluntarily/willingly
    submitted themselves to prostitution.
    Only a few of them re innocent!
    In all good job miss journalist!

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  52. Omg this is too scary! Pls tobore go to a living church for deliverance first before anything. Your blood, hair etc were taken u need prayers. You are a brave woman but pls don't do this again.

    ReplyDelete
  53. Gosh!...did i just read an horror book.....so spooky......
    D got my cap off for her!!....

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  54. Question Is, does she have evidence of this? Because so far, its just an allegation by her. I commend her efforts but she actually went too far, considering there doesn't seem to be any contigency plans that were made, for instance, with d authorities. What if she didn't succeed in escaping? I can't help but wonder if they didn't touch her at all during all d "grooming" and were just convinced she was a whore? Like, didn't they try to rate her performance too? Good job. I hope something good comes out of it

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  55. Wow! This is the real definition of investigative journalism, kudos to Tobore!!! Really brave move.

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  56. @Diva abi na driver be ur name, u dey very stupid u dey hear me so? God punish u if u nor short dat hole wey dey ur face wey u dey call mouth. No be local ashewo u bi? U wey dey frm u papa house go prostitute and dem wey travel out, nor bi dsame rope tie all of una? So bcs she mention benin girls name, kon be say u go dey insult every Edo person? Jobless fool... Na him mak una nor like una sef 4 dis country

    ReplyDelete
  57. @Diva abi na driver be ur name, u dey very stupid u dey hear me so? God punish u if u nor short dat hole wey dey ur face wey u dey call mouth. No be local ashewo u bi? U wey dey frm u papa house go prostitute and dem wey travel out, nor bi dsame rope tie all of una? So bcs she mention benin girls name, kon be say u go dey insult every Edo person? Jobless fool... Na him mak una nor like una sef 4 dis country

    ReplyDelete
  58. u should be thanking God for keeping her alive instead of being tribalism. Bunch Hypocrites. U are all in the same game; just different levels. Dealing with the same hell; just different devil. Next time don't raise ur voice, improve ur argument...

    ReplyDelete
  59. u should be thanking God for keeping her alive instead of being tribalism. Bunch Hypocrites. U are all in the same game; just different levels. Dealing with the same hell; just different devil. Next time don't raise ur voice, improve ur argument...

    ReplyDelete
  60. u should be thanking God for keeping her alive instead of being tribalism. Bunch Hypocrites. U are all in the same game; just different levels. Dealing with the same hell; just different devil. Next time don't raise ur voice, improve ur argument...

    ReplyDelete
  61. STELLA...YOU DIDNT POST MY COMMENT....pls check our powerfulgiststation.blogspot.com

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. everybody wants to be a blogger now aha!

      Delete
    2. STERRA OF LIFE..PLS POST MY COMMENT ABOUT MY EXPERIENCE WITH SOME OF THE LADIES IN MOSCOW . IT IS VERY REAL... THIS IS CHINYERE OMALE...ONE LOVE

      Delete
  62. Kudos to Tobore for her brilliant effort and particularly for her self-sacrifice.

    Corruption of government officials and the non-challant response by the authority to such types of investigations revealed In recent years makes it situation more difficult to be addressed.
    Like others, the report would be another journal article for office record-keeping. That's all as N9ja concern.
    The blame will always be apportioned to the authorities.

    Let us continue to hope and pray for government that would be ready to serve the public interest and not those acting in their own interests.

    The ones We trusted among them in the past, believing they would lead Us to that promise land have failed. 'If you can't beat them, join them' that's the game they played with our trust.

    May God help us

    ReplyDelete

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