BETTER-HALVES OF TOP NIGERIEN POLITICIANS HELD FOR CHILD-TRAFFICKING
PHOTO: THE GUARDIAN
Wives of minister and parliamentary
speaker arrested after alleged baby-trafficking syndicate uncovered in West
Africa
Graves are dug for migrants who died
in the Sahara Desert. 'I asked why there hadn’t been the same outcry,' said
journalist Moussa Akfar, who uncovered the baby trafficking. Photograph:
Almoustapha Alhacen/AP
Authorities in Niger
have arrested 17 people, including the wives of senior politicians, on
suspicion of involvement in a baby-trafficking network that "bought and
sold babies like bread".
The accused allegedly paid for
newborns from neighbouring Nigeria,
where human traffickers run notorious "baby factories" in which women
and girls are often forced to bear children
for sale.
The wife of Niger's agriculture
minister was among those apprehended, as was a bank director and a policeman.
The lawyer for another detainee, one of the wives of Hama Amadou, the speaker
of parliament and a key opposition member, called the arrests a politically
motivated "witch hunt".
Child trafficking has long been an
issue across west Africa,
and the high-profile arrests also implicated syndicates in Burkina
Faso and Benin.
Investigators believe each case
followed an identical trajectory: unable to have children, the moneyed couples,
travelled first to Nigeria to "buy" the babies for thousands of
pounds, before heading westwards to either Benin or Burkina Faso to get false
birth certificates.
Ousmane Toudou, a justice ministry
official, said: "A judge has indicted them on charges of lying about
giving birth, use of false documents, and forgery."
Toudou said they would probably be
held for several months ahead of trials, and dismissed allegations of political
motivations. "One man had three wives, one of whom is in her 50s, the
other in her 60s. In the space of two months, all three wives had had
twins," he said. "It's a biological aberration, clearly."
The incidents came to light after a
local journalist, Moussa Akfar, was approached nine months ago by a man who
became suspicious after his neighbour claimed to have had a child. "He
didn't understand how the wife never showed signs of pregnancy, and suddenly
one day the couple had a child.
"We approached it very
delicately and what we realised was this wasn't just one or two isolated cases
– it's on a massive scale across several countries," Akfar said.
Niger's authorities initially showed
little reaction, Akfar said. Then, after 92 migrants died when traffickers abandoned
them in the Sahara desert, he began publishing further stories.
"I asked why there hadn't been
the same outcry as when the migrants died and sanctions were imposed. Selling
babies is another form of trafficking. If people in positions of power bought
and sold babies like bread, then we need to start asking serious questions
about where we are headed as a society," Akfar said.
Statistics are hard to come by, but
campaigners say the sale of newborns is widespread and well-efficiently run by
both individuals and criminal organisations largely concentrated in Nigeria.
Typically, "factories"
hold dozens of women in squalid conditions for several weeks before selling
their infants for 750,000 naira (£2,700) for a girl, or twice that for boys.
Most of the trade is driven by local
demand in a region where being childless has a social stigma and fertility
treatment is limited. Pregnant women sometimes sell their babies willingly if
they have been raped, have unwanted pregnancies, or simply see it as a way to
make money when most live on less than $2 a day.
But babies are also sold abroad,
prompting Denmark to suspended adoptions from Nigeria
in April this year.
After falling pregnant while still
at school, 17-year-old Elizabeth (not her real name) ran away fearing ostracism
from her community in Abia state. A doctor who lured her to a dusty local
clinic promised to perform an abortion but instead drugged her until she gave birth
a week later, when he handed her a 20,000 naira (£80) "gift".
"When I came home, my mother
begged me where was the child was until I took her to the hospital," she
said. "We went to the hospital and the doctor brought out a different baby
but told us we should come back a week later because the child was
premature."
The doctor was arrested when another
woman – the actual mother of a baby – walked into the room and demanded her
child back.
Most cases are referred by
churchgoers, said Arinze Orakwue, of Nigeria's National
Agency for the Prohibition of Traffic in Persons. "You have
cases where women go to church for baptisms and they weren't pregnant two
months ago. That's how people know, this is a buy-buy [purchased] baby,"
he said.
Traffickers try to sell babies off
as quickly as possible to reduce feeding costs and the risk of discovery,
making it even more difficult to trace them, Orakwue said.
In the high-profile Niger case,
investigators were able to follow a paper trail that led them to a clinic in
Benin's bustling port city of Cotonou. "Their modus operandi here was to
scan false adoption papers and then get a clerk to sign them. It's a
well-established routine," an official from Benin's child
protection department said.
Niger ranks 28th highest in the
latest global index of slavery; Benin and Nigeria are
7th and 48th respectively.
Comments
Post a Comment