by Uchechukwu Olisah
The
search for the Golden Fleece which basically drove Edo youths,
particularly those of Benin extraction, to Europe in the late 80s and
early 90s, is today, no longer a fad. The mass movement to some of the
countries of Europe namely Italy, Spain, the Netherlands and Belgium
appears to have considerably dropped in the past few years. These
migrants, a number of them illegal, especially the girls, ended up
mainly in prostitution, while the men engaged in menial jobs and illegal
drugs business.
The trades were a thing of pride for those
plying them and members of their families. It was an era when dollars,
and later, Euros, flowed in, and the senders of the foreign currencies
and members of their families and, sometimes friends and well wishers,
relished. Any family which did not have anyone – woman or man,
especially young woman – abroad, had not started. That family was a
laughing stock, a societal unit lagging behind in the fashion of the
time.
This boom in sex trade got to a stage it became an
organised business with worldwide network of sponsors and recruiters who
with promises of better employment and opportunities of making quick
money, lured young women for reasons ranging from poverty, illiteracy,
and bandwagon effect to greed, to Europe under slavish conditions.
In
the first 20 years or so, it was tales of success, of quick money. The
Italos, as the women are fondly referred to, and Jandos, as the men are
called in local parlance, ‘made it’ and returned home with ‘triumph.’
They came back with, or sent home exotic cars, built modern houses, sank
boreholes to provide water, and made lots of foreign currencies
available for their people to have good life. Indeed, these were the
years a popular singer named Ohenhen came out with a hit song
celebrating the wealth of a popular Italo whom he extolled for her
generosity.
The consequences, some of which were insidious, did
not matter then. What mattered was the success of that moment. Some
people travelled with the consent of their families, just as others
either by themselves or through collusion sold off some of their
families’ properties, particularly parcels of land and buildings, to
sponsor their trips. In fact, there was no stigma attached to the whole
phenomenon. It was a case of if one came back with money, even if they
were a prostitute or commercial sex worker as some people put it, they
were honoured and respected. But if one came back poor, they were sex
workers, they were failures and they were laughed at.
However,
what was thought to be a success started taking its toll. Some of them
got badly beaten up, others became diseased, yet others died without a
trace. A number of them also came to the realisation of their slavish
condition when they got to know about the thousands of dollars or Euros
they had to pay as settlement or sponsorship fee when they got to their
trafficked destination.
The image of the people of the state and
indeed that of the state got bruised. Some of them were hit by
deportation. Others ended up in jail. Some of them later got to know
that whether deported or not, their families back home had fleeced them.
It became a tale of woes, all of which, individually or collectively,
left them in a tragic state, sometimes without the will to try again.
Observers
attribute this declining trend to greater education, more public
enlightenment and awareness regarding the dangers of illegal
immigration, prostitution and illicit drugs trade and the continued
global economic recession which left Europe as one of the most troubled
continents.
This increase in the creation of awareness, education
and enlightenment on the dangers of the then fashionable mass movement
to Europe was mounted by the Oba of Benin,Idia Renaissance, churches,
non-governmental organisations and concerned individuals, as well as the
National Agency for the Prohibition of Traffic in Persons and Other
Related Offences Commission (NAPTIP), among others.
The combined
efforts of these individuals, institutions and organisations have no
doubt helped in stemming the tide of the craze for going abroad and led
to the introduction of an anti-prostitution bill, its passage by the Edo
State House of Assembly and the signing it into law by then Governor
Lucky Igbinedion. The law, which was introduced as an executive bill,
provides severe penalties for sex trade practitioners and their
sponsors.
The law, cited as the “Criminal Code (Amendment) Law
2000,” amended some of the provisions of the criminal code law cap 48
laws of Bendel State 1976 as applicable to Edo State.
The law
prohibits any person from sponsoring a girl or woman by giving her any
financial, physical or material assistance to enable her travel out of
Nigeria for the purpose of becoming a prostitute or to carry out any
immoral act.
It stipulates that any person, who administers any
oath on a woman or girl or performs any fetish ritual to enable her to
travel out of Nigeria for the purpose of becoming a prostitute or to
have unlawful carnal knowledge with any person is guilty of an offence.
On conviction, such a person will be sentenced to 10 years imprisonment
or to pay a fine of N500,000 or both.
The law also has it that
any female person who knowingly offers herself for the purpose of
prostitution or carry out any immoral act within or outside Nigeria,
shall be guilty of an offence and shall be liable on conviction to an
imprisonment for two years or pay a fine of N20,000.
Also, any
man who patronises any woman in an act capable of being called
prostitution is guilty of an offence and liable on conviction to two
years’ imprisonment or to a fine of N10,000, just as “any woman who
lures or induces any male with gratification for the purpose of having
carnal knowledge with her is guilty of an offence and, if convicted is
liable to two years’ imprisonment or a fine of N10,000 or both.”
The
law provides for a prison term of 10 years or a fine of N500,000 for
those who lure or induce women into prostitution if they are found
guilty of the offence. In addition, they will forfeit any property
acquired through prostitution to the state.
During the Igbinedion
administration, some of sex trade practitioners and sponsors were
arrested and charged to court. The Federal Government agency, NAPTIP,
has also done a number of arrests and prosecutions of offenders, and has
continued to do so. The agency has even secured a number of
convictions, with many of the convicts jailed or asked to pay fines, or
both.
Besides, with more and better formal education, acquisition
of technical and vocational education, and greater entrepreneurial
skills, young men and women of Edo origin, particularly Benin kingdom,
started having, exploring and exploiting noble opportunities.
NigerianTribune
No comments:
Post a Comment