victims of human trafficking and never envisaged that they would ever become s ex hawkers.Rose thought she was coming to Europe to study and earn some money with a part-time job. What the Nigerian girl didn’t realise was that books would be a distant dream and the work she would be doing was prostitution.
if i dont pay they will kill me and
dump my body in a canal in Verona, i dont want to die. i am an only
child and i am all my mother has””
Sophie tells a similar tale.
She thought she was coming to work in
a shop or a factory to give her and her family a chance of a better
life. She now makes 2,000 euros (US $2,400) a week — something she could
never have dreamed of back home in her village in Nigeria — but the
price she pays is selling her body.
“I thought I would be free in
Europe,” she says wistfully in the dark, tiny one-room flat she shares
in the Italian port city of Genoa with two fellow s ex workers.
There are no official figures but the
International Office for Migration (IOM) estimates that there are
200,000 women living in Italy after being trafficked for s exual
exploitation. Some local rights groups believe as many as 170,000 of
them are Nigerian.
Traffickers demand on average more
than 50,000 euros (US $60,000) for travel expenses and accommodation,
with the girls having to work for them until the debt is paid off.
“I think in one year, I’ll be able to
pay my debt,” said 24-year-old Naomi, who came to Italy to earn a
living for her younger siblings after their parents died.
“I will pay. I don’t want to offend
them. I know there will be so many problems down there if I don’t. i
have already seen about 6 of my friend die because they tried to run
away”
That is a fear often held by women
forced into prostitution, says Sister Valeria, a former prostitute who
hails from Edo State, and now works with victims of trafficking in
Italy. She says traffickers often coerce victims by exploiting their
belief in voodoo rituals.
“They often make a sachet with the
girl’s hair or underwear and even menstrual blood and they keep it,” she
said. “Girls truly believe that if they reveal the names of these
people or don’t pay them back, horrible things will happen to them and
their families. They survive in the streets, some live in the bush or
open field while others are murdered and raped on daily basis by the
unknown men they follow home:
They all seek greener pastures because Nigeria has failed its citizens
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