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SHOCKER! How Nigerian Girls Are Trafficked To Germany For Prostitution Using Jazz | See Real Life Stories!

An insidious trend has emerged across Germany: More and more young women from Nigeria are being trafficked into prostitution. It is one of organized crime’s most lucrative business models, but the ringleaders are rarely caught.

In the red-light districts of German cities, business is thriving – and so is the trade in young Nigerian women. Every year, more young women from the West African country are being smuggled into Germany and forced into prostitution.

https://youtube.com/watch?v=Kwv0ydEXTyQ%3Fautoplay%3D1%26controls%3D1

Vulnerable become prey for traffickers

Generally, girls and women who fall prey to trafficking networks are already vulnerable because of their circumstances – often they are the children of single parents or orphans, says Barbara Wellner from Solwodi, a German non-profit organization for trafficked women.

One victim, Anna, lived in her grandmother‘s house in Nigeria together with her mother, brothers and sisters. She had four years of schooling before she was put to work on the farm, German national radio Deutschlandfunk reported.

When I was 16 years old, the family decided that I should be circumcised. I didn‘t want that, I was scared, so I refused. My mother hit me because I wouldn‘t conform to tradition. I couldn‘t see any other way to escape from being circumcised except to run away. I had no home anymore, so I walked the streets and tried to find help.

Young Nigerian girls and women in vulnerable situations are easy pickings for human traffickers. The person who offers to “help” them is often a relative or family friend, Wellner says. But “help” means being caught in a trap via a criminal network controlled by a Nigerian “madam” and leading all the way to Germany.

The young victim is told that she will have to pay a lot of money to get to safety in Europe, but once she is there she will get a good job and easily repay the debt.

In 2018, a young Nigerian woman arrested by German police told them how she had become the victim of one of these networks. Born into a “relatively poor family” in Nigeria, she said she was told that she could earn huge amounts of money working in Europe.

The woman’s story led to a major trafficking investigation – Operation Redroot – and the prosecution of the ringleader of a network that brought young Nigerian women to Europe and forced them to work as prostitutes — a woman known to her victims as “Madam Sandra.”

The real story – Madam Sandra

It was during the long legal trial of Madam Sandra, whose real name was Josephine Iyamu, that the extent and the grisly details of how victims of trafficking are subjected to abuse were revealed.

Iyamu, a British nurse, had promised to arrange for her victims to travel to Europe if they paid her a staggering 30,000 euros each. First they had to swear that they would not betray her to police or fail to repay their debt.

This pact was sealed in a voodoo or “juju” ceremony, in which the women were forced to eat chicken hearts, drink blood mixed with worms and have powder rubbed into cuts. The process gave Iyamu “crushing psychological control” over the women, according to Nigeria’s National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons, NAPTIP, which was part of the joint operation that led to her arrest and conviction.

The victims were then sent on a journey across the Sahara desert from Nigeria to the Libyan coast, during which they were shot at and raped, according to the UK National Crime Agency‘s senior investigating officer, Kay Mellor. From Libya, they took an inflatable boat to Italy, where they were given false identification papers, allowing them to travel on to Germany.

Why Germany?

More than 20,000 Nigerian women have crossed the Mediterranean to Italy in the past three years. The UN estimates that roughly 80 percent have ended up in prostitution. For most of them, the journey to Europe ends there, on the streets on the outskirts of Rome or Verona.

Now, however, smugglers and traffickers are bringing increasing numbers further north, to Germany. There are at least two possible reasons why: First, organized prostitution, such as brothels, is legal in Germany. Solwodi says Germany’s liberal laws on prostitution, which were reformed in 2017, have turned the country into “the bordello of Europe.”

Second, Germany isn’t doing enough to stop the traffickers. The authorities say they are making a greater effort — this year, for example, a Nigerian madam was convicted and sentenced in Duisburg to five years imprisonment. Each year the national criminal police agency, BKA, publishes the figures on trafficking.

In the report for 2018 it notes that it identified 61 Nigerian victims, reflecting a continuing upward trend for that group. Germany has also been part of an EU-wide project ETUTU, cooperating with Nigerian authorities to crack down on international Nigerian trafficking networks.

But German authorities could be doing much better in tackling organized crime, including traffickers, says Sandro Mattioni, a German writer and expert on mafia groups. “Organized crime can be fought on a number of levels,” Mattioni told Deutschlandfunk. “If a state acts against organized crime in a significant way, then the state becomes unattractive for such groups.”

The market prevails

But with the value of just one woman trafficked into prostitution estimated at 55,000 euros, according to Deutschlandfunk, the business remains highly attractive to criminal groups.

Nigeria has been active in trying to expose and discredit people who misuse “juju”, and in targeting traffickers.  But where this has led to gaps in the trafficking business, new operators have moved in – the so-called Nigerian mafia, whose tactics of absolute terror have replaced the trickery and psychological conditioning of the past.

In the end, it all comes down to money,” says John Omoruan, a former member of prominent Nigerian trafficking gang the Black Axe. The trafficking of Nigerian women will go on for as long as there is demand in Europe for younger and younger girls, he told Deutschlandfunk. “Europe is hungry, hungry for drugs, underage girls, anything that’s forbidden.

Another gang member was arrested in Germany and five other members were found to be members of a cult known as the Supreme Eiye Confraternity. In August 2016, the United Nation’s International Organisation for Migration (IOM) released a statement on the crises levels of trafficked women and girls from Nigeria to Europe.

The IOM put the number of Nigerian women who arrived by boat to Italy in the first six months of 2016 at about 3,600, nearly double the number who were registered in the same time period in 2015.

In 2014, about 1,500 Nigerian women arrived by sea. In 2015, that figure increased to 5,633. According to the IOM, more than 80 percent of these women will be trafficked in to prostitution in Italy and across Europe. Watch story of Nigerian woman trafficked into prostitution using black magic:

https://youtube.com/watch?v=epfED62IA8Q%3Fautoplay%3D1%26controls%3D1

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SHOCKER! Over Half A Million Kenyans Are Not Aware They Have HIV | SEE WHY!

Kenya is home to one of the world’s worst HIV and AIDS epidemics. Approximately 1.5 million people are living with HIV, and an estimated 1 million children have been orphaned by the virus. The prevalence peaked in 2000 and, according to the latest figures (2010), has dramatically dropped to around 6.3%.

According to a report published by Daily Nation, about 530,000 Kenyans don’t know they are HIV positive. According to the report, a study done by the Ministry of Health in conjunction with the National Aids and STI Control Program shows that for every three Kenyans who test HIV positive, at least one new case is diagnosed through their referral.

Through the Assisted Partner Notification Services study, 1,119 Kenyans who tested positive were asked to provide contact information of people they have had s*x with in the last three years. The study, however, excluded women who faced the risk of s*xual partner violence.

Dr. Peter Cherutich from the Ministry of Health led the research and said they recruited patients who had tested HIV positive and requested them to provide contact details of their partners, including the casual ones. “We then notified these partners through phone calls within two days and in some instances visited them,” he added.

Continue reading here:SHOCKER! Over Half A Million Kenyans Are Not Aware They Have HIV | SEE WHY!

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