The Nigerian ambassador to Mali, Iliya Nuhu has revealed that an estimated 30 girls from the country are trafficked into Mali daily.
Describing the problem as a “kind of modern slavery”, he said the problem had grown in “magnitude and sophistication”, with Nigerians going to their villages or towns to recruit young girls.
Nuhu said the girls are between the ages of 10 and 15, adding that the traffickers took advantage of Nigeria’s economic problems to lure their victims with promises of setting them up in “very lucrative businesses abroad”.
“These people tell them about businesses which are not there and these girls, with very loose parental upbringing, fall for their tricks,” he said. “They go to Nigeria to source these girls and sell them off to their cronies not only in Mali but in other countries; but we are able to work in cooperation with these countries to map out the routes the traffickers follow.
Since August, we have assisted not less than 30 of these girls to return to the country and this is a daily routine that the embassy and the staff go through. From what I gathered from the Nigerian community in Mali, an average of 20 to 30 girls are being trafficked into this country every day and those we get are those who raise the alarm.’’
He said the embassy was working with the Malian police to identify the traffickers, adding that he had written a memo to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Abuja, to work out a strategy to solve the problem.
One of the four girls rescued from the traffickers, Joy Monday, a hairdresser, described how she was lured to Mali.
“The woman told me that I can make between N5,000 and N7,000 fixing one person’s hair in Mali only to discover on getting here that I am to be a prostitute and I was rescued by a man who brought me to the embassy,” she said.
Another victim, Chidinma Ubah, said a man called Sunny, brought her to Mali, promising her that he was taking her to Europe. She said she sought refuge in a police station when she discovered that she was to be a prostitute.