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Friday, 24 January 2014

Inside Nigeria’s Ruthless Human Trafficking Mafia - Report

This is a must read. Found it on Premium Times
Six out of 10 people who are trafficked to the West are Nigerians. Premium Times investigative reporter, Tobore Ovuorie, was motivated by years of research into the plight of trafficked women in the country, as well as the loss of a friend, to go undercover in a multi-billion dollar criminal enterprise. She emerged, bruised and beaten but thankfully alive, after witnessing orgies, big money deals in jute bags, police-supervised pickpocketing, beatings and even murder. This is her story. Continue...

We are 10 at the boot camp: Adesuwa, Isoken, Lizzy, Mairo, Adamu, Ini, Tessy, Omai, Sammy and I. We have travelled together in a 14 seater bus from Lagos, hoping to arrive in Italy soon. We are eager to get to the ‘next level’ as it is called: from local prostitution to hopefully earning big bucks abroad. But first, it turns out, we have to pass through ‘training’ in this massive secluded compound guarded by armed military men, far from any other human being, somewhere in the thick bushes outside Ikorodu, a suburb of Lagos. Our trafficker, Mama Caro, welcomes us in flawless English, telling us how lucky and special we are; then she ushers us to a room where we are to sleep on the floor without any dinner.
I had not expected this. We had exercised, through a risk analysis role play, in advance: my paper PREMIUM TIMES, and our partners on the project, a colleague–Reece Adanwenon– in the Republic of Benin, and ZAM Chronicle in Amsterdam. We had put in place contacts, emergency phone numbers, safe houses, emergency money accounts. We had made transport and extraction arrangements. Ms. Reece is waiting in Cotonou, 100 kilometers to the West in neighbouring Benin, to pick me up from an agreed meeting place. But we hadn’t foreseen that there was to be another stop first: this isolated, guarded camp in the middle of nowhere. It dawns on me that we could be in big trouble.
Our trafficker, Mama Caro, welcomes us in flawless English, telling us how lucky and special we are; then she ushers us to a room where we are to sleep on the floor without any dinner.
Risk analysis and preparation
It had all started in Abuja, with me deciding to expose the human traffic syndicates that caused the death, through Aids, of my friend Ifuoke and countless others. As a health journalist, I had interviewed several returnees from sex traffic who had not only been encouraged to have unprotected sex, but who had also been denied health care or even to return home when they fell ill. They were now suffering from Aids, anal gonorrhea, bowel ruptures and incontinence. In the case of some of them, who hailed from conservative religious backgrounds, doctors in their home towns had denied them any treatment because they had been ‘bad’. I was also aware that powerful politicians and government and army officials, who outwardly professed religious purity, were servicing and protecting the traffickers.I wanted to break through the hypocrisy and official propaganda and show how, every day, criminals in Nigeria are helped by the powerful to enslave my fellow young citizens. My PREMIUM TIMES colleagues had done undercover work before; they had warned me of the risks, but had agreed to support me in my decision to go through with it. With my colleagues, and with the help of ZAM Chronicle, we then started in earnest.
I wanted to break through the hypocrisy and official propaganda and show how, every day, criminals in Nigeria are helped by the powerful to enslave my fellow young citizens.
Oghogho
I had advertised my wish to get to know a ‘madam’ whilst walking the streets of Lagos, dressed as a call girl.It worked. I had met Oghogho Irhiogbe, an accomplished, well-groomed graduate in her thirties (though she claimed to be only 26), and a wealthy human trafficker of note. My lucky hunch to tell her that my name was ‘Oghogho’ too had immediately warmed her to me. She told me I looked like her kid sister and from then on treated me like a favourite.
“Don’t worry about crossing borders and getting caught,” she had told me. “Immigration, customs, police, army and even foreign embassies are part of our network. You only run into trouble with them if you fail to be obedient to us.” I already knew this to be true. Two of the trafficked sex workers I had interviewed had tried to find help at Nigerian embassies in Madrid and Moscow, only to realise that the very embassy officials from whom they had sought deportation had immediately informed their pimps. They had eventually made it back to Nigeria only after they had developed visible diseases, such as AIDS-related Kaposi sarcoma.
Precious had already made enough money to start building her own house in Enugu, halfway between Abuja and Port Harcourt.
Oghogho Irhiogbe had been luckier. She owned four luxury cars, two houses in Edo State, and was busy completing the building of a third house near the Warri airport in Delta State. Others I had met through my initial ‘call girl’ exploits were clearly on their way to riches, too. Priye was set to go back to the Netherlands, where she worked before, to become a ‘madam’. Ivie and Precious were quite happy to go back to Italy. Precious had already made enough money to start building her own house in Enugu, halfway between Abuja and Port Harcourt.
Forza Speciale
It is on the windy Sunday evening of October 6 that I make my first contact with the outer ring of this mafia. A big party with VIPs is on the cards; the kind of party an ordinary girl, or rather ‘product’, as we are called by traffickers, is not usually invited to. But I am currently on a fortune ride: Oghogho’s favourite. Additionally, I have been classified as ‘Special Forces’, or ‘Forza Speciale’ as my new contacts say, borrowing the Italian term. It’s a rule of thumb, I understand, that a syndicate subjects girls to classification through a check on their nude bodies and I, too – in the company of some male and female judges, headed by a trafficker called Auntie Precious – had been checked. I had received the highest classification. “This means that you don’t have to walk the streets. You can be an escort for important clients,” Auntie Precious had told me in a soft, congratulatory tone. The ones of ‘lesser’ classification were referred to as Forza Strada, the Road Force.
The party is held at a gorgeous residence along the Aguiyi Ironsi Way in Maitama, Abuja. This is designed to be a festive end to a great day, in which we went to church, hung out at the choicest places in town, shopped and got dressed in a suite at the Abuja power citadel, meeting point of the elite, the Transcorp Hilton.
The ‘dividend’ is not from prostitution and trafficking alone, but Oghogho won’t tell me what the other source is.
It is more like an orgy. Male and female strippers entertain guests, drugs abound, alcohol is everywhere in unrestrained flow; there is romping in the open. Also, big bags of money are changing hands. Barely an hour after we arrive, Oghogho receives a big jute bag, which is delivered from another room. As we walk out and she puts the money in the boot of her car, she smiles at me. “Don’t worry; very soon, you’ll get to receive dividend.” This ‘dividend’ is not from prostitution and trafficking alone, but Oghogho won’t tell me what the other source is. “When you come on board fully, you’ll know.”
A retired army colonel from the Abacha era sees to it that we are not disturbed. “He has top connections and sees to a smooth flow of the business,” Oghogho tells me.
Pickpocketing training
How ‘top’ these connections are, I find when I am taken with a group of girls to be trained in pickpocketing. We, a group of ten ‘products’, are placed at various crowded bus stops in the suburb of Ikorodu, where we must ‘practice’ under the guard of two army officers, a policeman as well as a number of male ‘trainers’. The policeman doesn’t even bother to cover his name badge: Babatunde Ajala, it reads.
The general operation is supervised by Mama Caro, popularly called Mama C, a 50-something, light-complexioned, busty woman. Her deputy is a Madam Eno. Mama C has told us that pickpocketing is a crucial skill for the Forza Speciale: we will need to be able to pick valuables from clients. She adds that the pickings are added to the girls earnings, so we will be able to pay off our debts– commonly called ‘meeting our targets’ – in a short time.
When I perform dismally, Eno rains abuses on me.  We are all to stay at the bus stop until I pick an item from somebody. It is already 11 PM.Tired, hungry and angry with me, Adesuwa, Isoken and the policeman guarding my group pick some extra pockets and hand me the items, so that I can show them to Eno.
We practice pickpocketing under the guard of two army officers and a policeman
The next day, the bumpy journey to the ‘training camp’ appears endless. My fellow ‘products’ are snoozing and I battle to stay awake, wondering if we are tired or drugged. I note the bus moving off the main road somewhere around Odogunyan, into thick bushes, almost a forest.We stop at a compound guarded by armed military men. As my fellow ‘products’ wake up, it is clear that they think we are still in Lagos.
New names and indenture
The next day starts with strip tease and lap dance training after breakfast, and thereafter poise and etiquette. Five other girls have arrived in the meantime. They are all graduates, leaving for Italy fully aware of what they are to do there. “If I get caught by local police, I will just tell them I was trafficked against my will,” one of them, Gbemi, says light-heartedly. “I don’t think oyinbo (white man) will believe Mama C if she says that I am there voluntarily.”
I receive a crash course in pedicure and manicure because I am so bad at pickpocketing. “You’ll be utilizing these skills at my wellness centre in Italy,” Mama C says, after scolding me for being lazy and testing her patience. “You will be working on only men whilst wearing sexy dresses. That will enable you to attract customers.”
Mama C makes us sign a statement that we have willingly embarked on the journey
Later, Mama C makes everyone sign a statement that they have willingly embarked on the journey and that they are to return certain sums as professional fees to her. No girl is given a copy of what she has signed and the amount varies inexplicably: while Isoken signs up for a debt of US $100,000, I will have only US $70,000 to pay. We are told that we will receive new passports with false names and even false nationalities in Cotonou. I am to become a Kenyan, Mairo South African, and so on. “I have boys in the Benin immigration office,” boasts Mama C.
Horror
A just-arrived traditional ‘doctor’ then puts us through rites that involve checking the horoscope of each girl as well as collecting some of her blood, fingernails, hair and pubic hair. He then picks out four of us as ‘problematic’ and says we will bring ‘bad luck’. Either he is really clairvoyant or he is a professional security operative who has run background checks on us, because he is right about at least three of the four. Two of us have had unfortunate earlier experiences involving deportation back to Nigeria and are possibly known to the authorities in Europe. I am number three.
What happens next is like a horror movie.
As we ‘unlucky’ four, are standing aside, Mama C talks with five well-dressed, classy, influential-looking visitors.The issue is a ‘package’ that Mama C has promised them and that she hasn’t been able to deliver. The woman points at me, but Mama C refuses and for unexplained reasons Adesuwa and Omai are selected. We all witness, screaming and trying to hide in corners, as they are grabbed and beheaded with machetes in front of us. The ‘package’ that the visitors have come for turns out to be a collection of body parts. The mafia that holds us is into organ traffic, too.
We all witness Adesuwa and Omai being beheaded in front of us. The ‘package’ that the visitors have come for turns out to be a collection of body parts.
With all of us trembling and crying, I and the other three ‘unsuitable’ ones are herded into a separate room. Mama C comes later to take me to yet another room for questioning. Angry beyond measure, she whips me all night, telling me to yield information on the ‘forces’ protecting me. “You are going nowhere,” she keeps shouting. “I have invested too much in you!”
Clearing the ‘spirit’
The next morning Mama C eats her breakfast while I starve: I have last eaten the previous morning. When she finished, and whilst the ‘approved products’ leave for Cotonou, Benin, to commence their journey to Italy, Mama C takes us four ‘unsuitables’ to visit three new, different ‘doctors’: one in the Agege neighbourhood of Lagos, the second in rural Sango Ota village and the third in remote Abeokuta in Ogun State. She clearly believes in traditional ‘medicine’ and is desperate to find a treatment for the ‘demons’ we are said to carry.
The first two ‘doctors’ agree with the first one that I am bad news, but the third, after roughly cutting off most of my hair, declares me free from the ‘spirit’. The ‘evil spirits’ in the other three girls, meanwhile, have been ‘beaten out of them’ with dry whips. Back at the camp the first ‘doctor’ rages at Mama C for approving me, insisting that the ‘doctor’ who ‘freed me from the spirit’ is a fraud. “This girl will bring about your downfall! You will end up in jail!” I am all the more convinced that he possesses not supernatural powers, but certain information.The syndicates are well-connected and someone may have told him that I am not who I say I am. The ‘doctor’ keeps repeating that ‘forces’ are protecting me. But Mama C insists that she is not to lose her investment.
The ‘doctor’ keeps repeating that ‘forces’ are protecting me. But Mama C insists that she is not to lose her investment.
Meanwhile, new ‘products’ have arrived to pass through the rites that night. The whole camp is again in the grip of fear as chilling screams indicate that some of the new arrivals – two girls and a young man, I learned later – are also murdered.
“Oghogho, I wonder what actually brought you here. I never expected a girl like you to venture into this,” says one of Mama C’s errand boys, as he enters the room I had again been locked in later that night with a plate of food.He seems well disposed to me. “You found and returned my Blackberry that I lost during one of the pickpocketing training sessions,” he explains. I had not realised the escort whose phone I found had been this boy; then, he had worn a cap pressed deep into his eyes. “Other girls would just have kept my phone,” he says. “You don’t belong here.I keep wondering what level of poverty has made you endanger yourself. You don’t deserve this.”
The plate of food is all I need to get my strength back. We are to travel the following morning.
Escape
As we are about to leave, I lose my phone to the army officer. Searching all of us, he has taken Isoken’s phone already and she has pointed at me to divert attention from herself, saying I had a phone too. He takes mine at gunpoint.I can only thank the heavens that it is dead. I had been upset because it didn’t charge the previous night, but the fact that it won’t switch on is my second lucky break: it has a lot of pictures and conversations I have recorded in the camp. The disadvantage of losing my phone is that I can’t contact our colleague Reece, who is to help me once I get to Cotonou. I also can’t communicate with my editors back in Nigeria.
All along the road leading up to the border, police and customs officers wave and greet Madam Eno and our head of operations, Mr James. Nigerian Immigrations and Customs officers also greet us warmly at the border post itself, whilst enquiring if there is anything in it for them today.
“Welcome, Madam! How have sales been?”
Eno: “Not much.”
“But your batch was allowed entry yesterday, so why claim you haven’t been making sales? “
Eno: “We are not the owner of yesterday’s batch of girls. We own these ones in this bus.”
“Haaa!You want to play a smart one? Not to worry, your boss will sort all this out with us.”
The officers then wave the minibus through without any form of documentation.
The original plan was for me to go with the transport as far as Cotonou, the capital of our neighbouring country Benin. But I don’t want to stretch it any longer. The border is usually very crowded and I plan to escape as soon as we are there. It works. Just after the Seme border post, in front of a crowded, muddy market, I run. Merging with the crowd, I take my top off – I have another top under it – and cover my head with a scarf. The army officer is following me, looking for me. I dive into a store and lose him.
Just after the Seme border post, in front of a crowded, muddy market, I ran.
I travel the twenty kilometres from the border motor park to Cotonou by minibus taxi.Colleague Reece – alerted by a phone call the driver helps make to her to ensure that she will be there to pay him – will wait for me there. Upon arrival, I see a woman I recognise from her Facebook photo. “Reece?”“Tobore!” She cries and holds out her arms to catch me. “I am safe.”

238 comments:

  1. Y Edo pple dey fall my hand.

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  2. Blame the damn govt and the worst economy

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  3. So this thing still happens?

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  4. long story add me on F only 792CC005

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  5. What a story, so these things are still happening..... Imaging the diseases they are left with at the end. over what? money. ladies please stay away from runz what's the point having all the money with incurable diseases to go with it

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  6. This is pure evil,a coordinated gang of evil doers,this peoplw shouldn't go unpunished.
    Shockwaves flowed down my spine @the beheaded girls. God your children are suffering.

    ~BONARIO~says so via NOKIA3310

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  7. I thought this was so sad, the fact that these people put themselves into this willingly just to escape life here, not realising that what they are going into is much worse, especially the ones that end up being beheaded for their body parts.. God help us..

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  8. If the road that I read is true,then some people are so heartless that they do not deserve to live amongst humans.The Nigerian should do more to end human trafficking.This is because,human traficking is modern slavery.

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  9. Why should I be bothered with this when I'm drunk in love with Korede...

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  10. Nna eh, Things r happening ooo. sigh!

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  11. Is this mama Caro the mother of Caro mentioned by Wiskid in his song? Believe,some celebrities fucked ruggedly than so called prostitutes. I should mention their names?
    -Yemoh.

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  12. Gracious goodness!!! Can't bliv all ov dz r happenin in naija... God save us!

    SKEGGS

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  13. Is this really true? Or just a story.

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  14. this is heartbreaking,poverty needs to be eradicated in Nigeria.

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  15. Haaaa,na waohhhhhh!

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  16. Hmm,Terrible tins happen in dis world

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  17. Linda God forbid why do you like to bring Nigeria down i have visited so many European cities the least people you see while driving around are blacks, but we Nigerians like to believe negativity about our country.

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    1. Pls read the piece again n understand b4 u say she's bringing her kind down. Denying d facts on ground will cost d head of 2 more girls.....so dnt tk it personal. She jst brought to light d truth.

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  18. The story doesn't add up biko!

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  19. Strange but true.

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  20. God! This country has turned to sometin else oo.. So ds is wat happens behind closed doors. Even the police men dat are meant to protect innocent citizens..kai!

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  21. Experience and reports like these are what great movies are about, but our producers and directors are busy making 'blackberry girls'. That said, the reporter was brave to do what she did, didn't think we still had investigative reporters in Nigeria. Government needs to tackle this and the rot in our armed forces.

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  22. this is skin-crawling-freaky and damn right scary!!!!! that things like this happen in this Nigeria is making me scared of walking at night. Jesus protect us all oh..... Thank God for your life and that they didn't kill you

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  23. My God this just gave me chills,what is this world turning into!

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  24. Is this fiction???

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  25. My Good God !!!:o

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  26. Kudos to the reporter. We need more of these brave journalists here in naija.

    Jes sayin

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  27. *clicks tongue* Aru eme!
    The atrocities of my country Nigeria. I always tell my mom, "mommy, God is angry at Nigeria, he looks down on our country is filled with anger"

    Pray for Nigeria, don't listen to anyone who says otherwise. God, and only God can save our country.

    Imagine if there was a public announcement, that all Christians should fast for a week, on behalf of Nigeria, you think God wont help us?

    *clicks tongue*

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  28. God help us. This looks both real and unreal. Funny enough I was just reading a paper on human trafficking and my mum was telling me a story about a prostitute who was trafficked and deported to Nigeria who was raised by a rev sister who will now stand as her mum since she's about to get married with no family. God help us.

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  29. All that glitters Ȋ̝̊̅§ not Gold

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  30. Na wa o. People still dey with dis kind of heart. All dis Mafians na People Mama o. Buh the problem is wit the Youth demselces , dey want quick money even at the xpense of deir lives. Poor gurls. Dis I'd an eye opeber to dose who want to travel abroad for prostitution.

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  31. Wt is dis country turning into? God pls save ur pple

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  32. I give kudos to that brave reporter for risking her life for her job.

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    1. I swear down!!!! That's what professional journalism is all about.. Buh things are really happening oh.. God have mercy!!!!!

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    2. Out of words! *Cagey*

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    3. Or u copied from Stella's blog. Premium Times indeed!

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    4. Pls this story is very very fake. This is fiction. Who goes undercover as a prostitute without any significant secuirty organisation backing her up and ready to bust the traffickers??? A fictional mumu that's who.
      This is all nonsense unless I read in the papers tomorrow that several high level human traffickers were arrested.

      Did she open her legs and endager her life just to write a news article in a shit newspaper.

      This is all fabricated.

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    5. If you are living in abuja, and you know any big high classed lady people call mama C ormama Caro or oghogho irhiogbe, be ware! There is a possibilty that some people they have known have dissappearrd. Keep away before you become their next scape goat

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  33. Dis is absolute Trash!! Ladies dat fall victims of traffiking are simply d ones dat need fast money& has no regard/ respect for demselves****I pity dia bitter souls

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    1. Please think before you comment.. You really think its about the money?? Nobody deserves prostitution as a way of life!!! If you got nothing nice to say, then read and don't bother commenting..

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    2. Are you stupid or just an idiot? Did you even bother to read the story before exposing your foolishness to the Web?

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    3. Aside those that are kidnapped into it. Many people go into prostitution out of greed. Adorable Jewel is being frank here. Over pity dey worry una at times

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    4. I don't think @Adorable Jewels read the article. From her badly written English I kinda get that she is not very literate. Forgive her ignorance @Adanna

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    5. Adorable jewel my black ass!foolish comment from a foolish person with a foolish name.I must comment syndrome.nigerians can judge ehh!!!like u re any better.n before u start saying trash,am a guy...pple will jst open their gutters n be spewing nonsense!!!*tony*

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  34. Are you kidding me? Walahi I know these things happen,but actually reading this with real names of places I know is giving me the chills! God of mercy!!!

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  35. I want to believe this information has been given to the relevant authorities and some of these people have been tracked down. If your reason for taking such risk was to have it all over the internet just like that, my dear you have failed.

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  36. When the quest for money and power beclouds the meaning of humanity!! Ridiculous!!!

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  37. When the quest for money and power beclouds the meaning of humanity!! Ridiculous!!!

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  38. pls tell me this is just a story. blood of God.
    Isnt this wat they shud make into a movie. not d nonsense they show us...

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  39. Can't stop cryin, oh my God,in dis Nigeria? Lord pls let ur kingdom come quickly. Humans are alredi tryin to dethrone d devil oooo.

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  40. Did you mean to tell me you typed all these?abeg its too long joor linda,couldn't read them all
    #Chinwe

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    1. Ur just a fool. ...if itz hw wizkid had sex n got a girl pregnant ,u ll ve time.....olodo

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  41. Jesus!!!!!!!!!!!!!!am am in awe...God please help this country naw......

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  42. Jesus!!!!!!!!!!!!!!am am in awe...God please help this country naw......

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  43. christ. d horrible things going on in this country. those who swore to protect us are d very one exploiting us and our trust in them. thank GOd u're safe. I hope dose animals are brought to books and justice be served.thanks for sharing d story.

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  44. Wow! Am dumbstruck!!!

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    1. Our politicians are likely to be the ones who will use those human parts

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  45. Hmnnnnnn.... Now let the arrests begin.

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    1. You really think there's justice in Nigeria. For them to have military support then they will definitely have Ogas at the top (pun intended).

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    2. Which arrest? Did youi read the entire piece? Its a multimillion empire involving people in govt. Madam C and Eno are rapacious sha and having the support of "some people are the top" I honestly pray this journalist will be safe living in Nigeria

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  46. God i am speachless wonder hmmmm

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  47. Wow!!!! I couldn't stop reading, I can't even begin to imagine the level of poverty that makes a human being decide trafficking or prostitution is the only way out. I find it difficult being insultive so I really can't wrap my head around beheading a person... Evil is real and alive in people.

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  48. Adorable Jewel....I feel so sorry for you! People like you are the ones that need fast one. May God forgive you! You are not a woman...I guess! FOOL.

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  49. God I am speechless wonder hmmm

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  50. Biko is this real or a script? God help us all. I am scared.

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    1. Seriously it sounds like a chapter in a novel. But I pray the message gets across.

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  51. Akuko. Linda ds chick is only using u to promote a book she's writing.

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    1. Lol! & did 1 thinks it is a script. Worse tinz happen everyday

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  52. Lily ds post s too short,make it long next tym...most women traffik today bcos of bad govt in naija..most of dem re graduates no job,no money.i pity dem sha

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    1. If a woman has no job let her go and marry,some of them are being disturbed by spirit of pride and greed

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    2. I blame the govt for all the crime that has happened in this country. Nigeria has money. If the money wasn't being embezzled, their would have been enuf establishment, good standard of living and enuf jobs. We wouldn't have had armed robbers, kidnappers, scammers, boko haram n stuff. Now our reputation is like shit abroad. Every country in this world has some Nigerians in their prison. I'm not even proud to mention that I am a nigerian abroad. Its embarrassing cos they see u as a potential criminal. How can one steal billions knowing that millions in the country are dying from poverty?I know people who don't even know of they will eat their next meal. Know people who have been unemployed for 8 years now. It is bad. Yet when people re caught stealing small tinz , they re stoned to death or burnt alive. Imagine the number of people who have been killed in this country for committing much less crimes. Many have been locked in jail indefinitely without trial for very small crimes. Some are even innocent yet languishing in jail because they have no one to help them.it is bad

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  53. Too risky though, which kind risk be that

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  54. Not complete,give us names else ‎​​A̶̲̥̅♏ taking this with a pinch of salt...

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  55. Wow.. So much danger..and then some get killed even before reaching the border?? Nawao.. Things are really happening.. God is the only one who can purge our nation of this ill!! Its totally wrong!!!!!

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  56. Oh my goodness! Am speechless! This feels like a bad horror movie. What people do for money, selling their souls to the devil! Gaad Forbid! Justice must prevail......! The reporter is so brave! She could have lost her life. I just don't understand human beings no more.

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    1. That's the same way I felt earlier today when I read the story...like I was part of a horror movie
      The case is that this is nigeria no one would get arrested not when prominent men and women are involved

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  57. Is she a prostitute or an investigator?really don't understand who she is but in as much as i feel for these people i still blame them for i believe there're other genuine ways of making money though strenuous and yields little profit,many people have gone through worse but believing God they progressed.i pray that God reminds us every day of our lives the reason why we were created which is to love,know and serve him in this world so as to be with him in our next,not that we don't need money but we shouldn't make it the ultimate......before every action remember God

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  58. What a life!!!
    All in d name of money
    I salute ur corrage "Oghoogho"
    Sholamatty

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  59. Jeeeeez!! Evil everywhere!

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  60. Wow! What a Turmoil she went through! I just hope we young ladies can be satisfied in whateva situatn we find ourselves! Never give in to unlawful abuse of ur body for Money sakes Please!!!!!

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  61. If i do not know this Tobere in person this story would have sounded incredulous. Yes she is principled, brave and incorruptible. Yet I am sure did not know what she was going into. Who would knowingly walk into such a grave chilling risk? This is an award winning report! Kudos Tobore but stay away from this type of danger please!

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  62. How are we sure that some staff of NATION AGENCY FOR HUMAN TRAFFICKING are not part of this syndicate since they are well connected? if so how do we gat justice to these crimes May God help us!

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  63. If i do not know this Tobere in person this story would have sounded incredulous. Yes she is principled, brave and incorruptible. Yet I am sure did not know what she was going into. Who would knowingly walk into such a grave chilling risk? This is an award winning report! Kudos Tobore but stay away from this type of danger please!

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  64. For real? The best riches are those you worked and sweated for legitimately. What a brave lady. Kudos to her.
    Tri.

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  65. That's quite a story linda,is this real?

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  66. That's quite a story linda,Is this real?

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  67. Please tell me this was just a splendid piece of writing from a novel not real life. This was a very very captivating piece. I am still in shock. Wow!

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  68. What an act of bravery. some people are actually kidnapped and deceived, against their own will. what an act of inhumanity. sure these madams have children
    www.ethniques.blogspot.com

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  69. Speechless. This is unbelievable! My heart goes out to those who lost souls. Hmm

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  70. what an act of bravery on the side of the reporter. some people are actually kidnapped or deceived against their will. thats the height of inhumanity on the side of the so called maddam

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  71. Touching! In this country? Law makers involverd. My soul weeps for my dear country. So so sad.

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  72. What with the senseless spilling of human blood? What horror? The result of surplus population who are jobless, idle and hopeless. Human life is too cheap around here.

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  73. Choi! Mehn linda na so u cheap! See as dis girl jx use u 2 advertise en book or abi script! Jooor tel us d name of d novel! Stp dis trashh abeg! U go fear reporter nah! Nonsense!

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  74. Jesus Christ!...feels like a plot from a horror movie..the hieghts man go to achieve fame, money and power... God have mercy on our sinful souls, what an experience! Am speechless! Seek ye first the kingdom of God and all other things shall be added...Protect us all from evil ones oh God even when we are stupid enough to walk open eyed into their midst! Chai, girl you are so brave...

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  75. Jesus Christ.wat won't one hear in this country tins are happening indeed. God saved this girl for a reason.Brave girl God continue to protect you.Amen

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  76. Wow......whoever this is......May Almighty God Bless you for revealing the rot that's going on deeply in Nigeria. This lady should be a recipient of a national award......

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  77. Wow......whoever this is......May Almighty God Bless you for revealing the rot that's going on deeply in Nigeria. This lady should be a recipient of a national award......

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  78. It is only God that can judge this people, the rot is from the head flowing down to the bottom

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  79. Woww!!! This is rily a horror story...thanks to that reporter for this exposure..I hope the traffickers get caught..
    Retty

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  80. Terrible world we live in...

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  81. Am clue to this,this a damn risk,I hope your able to arrest all this women&get in touch with the highest authorities&sack all this useless officers,God will help us in this country

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  82. Am just wandering if this is a movie or a real life scenario cause truly, God is with this Lady to have been able to come out alive from such a barbaric situation. Too many questions on my mind and then I look up and say God is indeed with her. God help us all. What a World we live in....all in the name of money, fame and power.....and they are all VANITY!!!

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  83. Wow! This is quite touching story. Its would be of much breakthrough if the government can really go deep into this matter and bring to justice these people and the various officers involved. And to the ladies who might be considering making fortures through human trafficking/runs lady, a rethink in better now than a life time regret and not them saying conditions got them into the act.

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  84. Naked weaponzz....

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  85. Naked weaponzz....

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  86. If all these r true, government & d NGOs should take it from there. D story sound horrorful. 1da how many of dem dies yearly. If I do not read about any arrest any time soon, den d story is made up 2 scare ppl from subjecting theirselves in2 traficking! Ogamba Chux

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  87. U are indeed a brave journalist.

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  88. WOW!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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  89. Guys check this out http://tasknjob.com/?share=117951

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  90. Hmmmnnnn.... God have mercy and the reporter really did a great job... She tried!

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  91. Aunty Linda, dis story was made up, thou d incidences & sequences may b true. Xperience of 3 or more victims used 2 scare d prospective ones. It is called personification of facts &/or figure. Gud idea! Until arrests r made, it remain fiction! Ogamba chux !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Pls publish my comment. U av already denied me 1 comment & 1 reply dis 9th.

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    1. Pls you have sense. Fake story

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  92. I am dumbfounded. May God protect us.

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  93. If this is real, then what is anyone doing about it? God help us. creepy...

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  94. Jeezzzzz! Des tinz still happen? OMG! We must not relent in our prayers for Nigeria. These traffickers shuld b arrested immediately.

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  95. Truly God works through men! He used you to bring out hiden truth that has remained untold for so long. Please ensure to give him thanks for preserving your life for the fulfilment of a Purpose. Those native doctors were not security agents rather they are evil men possessed with witch craft powers. Whenever anyone honestly set out to achieve anything not for personal gain but for the benefits of humanity, he\she is given a guardian angel for that mission. I read this & felt my heart cringed in pain. " asked myself why this wickedness? All for wealth gained on blood of fellow humans. You indeed took a great risk I wouldn't even wish for an enemy but you proved that Nigeria do still have professional with a passion for great course! I only pray this sacrifice would not be in vain. That the Nigeria government would do everything possible to bring a stop to this crime.

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  96. Shebi dis nigeria na hia I dy dy look. God have mercy
    Mary

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  97. This is just plain stories. When is the book going to be launched.
    And it is pathetic to play on people's plight in a bid to promote your fiction-skills and aspiration

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    1. Thank you. Too many gullible nigerians. This report is too generic and fake.

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  98. God I'm speechless,so things are this bad in naija,hmmmm

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  99. Wow! I happen to know a young girl who embarked on this journey willingly too. She calls home from time to time and updates her facebook too. I only pray she gets out of this and finds her way home, her mum is worried over her.

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  100. This is deep and heavy. Its a pity that the trafficking chain has evolved into an empire aided by the lofty in the society. All of this still boils down to the economic failure of the government in its responsibilities to its citizens-majority never chose this path as a first choice buh succumbed to the pressures of surviving. May God be with 'em all

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  101. Hmmmm...wat a risk taken and God will surely expose them.

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  102. Hmmmm...wat a risk taken and God will surely expose them.

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  103. Na wa o! How can a woman be so wicked as to sell her fellow women's body part for money. And this reporter, you know your job...kudos

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  104. This people don't operate only in d physical so I won't be surprise if an arrest won't take place.And to think they r backed by d high n mighty in govt!!!!God help us.

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  105. Her story is disjointed,left one with many unanswered questions. Was it in Abuja Hilton hotel or outskirt of Lagos? For a journalist your story telling skill is very poor.#okbye

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  106. Wow wow wow! Dis is rili interesting, sad, outrageous, scary and dangerous! Wat d hell were u tininkn takin dt risk? Wat if u had lost ur life in d process? Wat point do u tink ur tryin 2 prove? Nw d only evidence u had u lost it 2 soldier guy hw do u tink d govtment can trace such a huge number or network and dangerous operators lik dis dt involves lots of high class pple. U wuld hv atleast takin out ur sim card and ur memory card n put inside ur bra. Well. I dnt tink. In nigeria ur words are enuf to bring down dat mafia group. Well am rili happy ur alive n ur out of it safe. And sound but it was dangerous. Well pple will do anytin to survive and sm will do worst tins 2hv money and power. Iope wit d. Lil info d security angencies cn start a proper and full scale investigations and bring does gutless pigs 2 face d wrath of d law. Kudos 2u dear u nailed it. Gud write up and story its worth d risk.

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  107. Wow! This is jounalism in it's finest. What a brave reporter. Linda thanks for featuring this story.

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  108. Ooh my God, pls I want a follow-up on this story. Girls go through all these for money?

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  109. My advice I dnt tink poverty shld mk u gt into tins u dnt wanna. Prostitution and aristo is enuf. Y try 2 flee d country cuzu wanna mk a biger money and in d process endangerin ur life. Pls ladies be careful, ur responsible 4 ur decisions and actions and as so u'd deal wit d outcome and live wit 4 d rest of ur life. Be patient. Be wise, tink properly. Be careful, hv faith. U cn improvise if tins tend nt 2wrk out but dnt do d risky game except ur sure of d outcome. And as 4does of u who tink its a jus a game or a joke dt u cn open ur scornful useless sensless rubish silly lousy mouth 2mk comments I pity u untill ur trap into doin smtin u dnt wanna do and d only option out is death mayb den u'd kno hw far. Let's jus pray dat all dis unforseen circumstance dnt befall us.

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  110. this seems scripted

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  111. Am just Glad she came back home Safe.
    Its Well.

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  112. I'm sure nothing will be done. Top gov't officials are involved.... Who says the president knows nothing about this! Or even some of his close pals! So sad! Someone should look into this & make arrests. That journalist shld be careful now where she goes!! Her life is in danger I'm sure.

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  113. I doubt this to be a real story, and the names she mentioned, if they truly exist, they will be sort for and arrested. I believe she is only giving an insight. After all, we've seen this in movies and heard about it countless times. That that's the process of trafficking, should it be called trafficking? I disagree with the name, it can't be trafficking wen adults willing give themselves to be used as a money making product for jobless old hags, called mama watever.

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  114. But on d oda hand, if this is a true report, then I'll say, a warrant should be issued for the arrest of the perpetrators of the act. Especially for the killing. On d oda hand, I doubt if d women inchrage should be blamed. After all, d girls were the ones who sort em out.and allowed them to be used.

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  115. Hmmm! Am just speechless.

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  116. I doubt this to be a real story, and the names she mentioned, if they truly exist, they will be sort for and arrested. I believe she is only giving an insight. After all, we've seen this in movies and heard about it countless times. That that's the process of trafficking, should it be called trafficking? I disagree with the name, it can't be trafficking wen adults willing give themselves to be used as a money making product for jobless old hags, called mama watever.

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  117. This was very dangerous . I think this reporter should be highly commended. her efforts should not be in vain. measures should be taken by the govt when such results are written to protect the citizenry and not wasting resources having the SSS chase El Rufai all around . Linda, it is about time to advocate for unemployment benefits from the govt for our citizenry who don't work. Where are the lawmakers ? They should set up a bill and make the president sign it to law about welfare. This affects our children directly . If it's homosexuality they would be quick to do the needful what does not affect me or my children

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  118. Yeeee.....in Nigeria?...Big kudos to the reporter...God will bless you bountifully...Nigerians are too despirate and will do anything for money...May God help us...and heavens wrath befall all involved in this unspeakable act

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  119. Journalism at its best we must say!

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  120. This writer is just an attention seeker. The script is full of incomplete details e.g. there are no single real names of any of the perpetrators and she also cleverly designed an escape route for the lead character of the story (herself) when she wrote that one of the traditional/Native doctors cleared her. Yes we all know that there exist a ring of human sex traffickers but what we don't need is a "Super story" version by this so called writer. By the way, how did she retrieve her phone from the soldier...........? Just asking.......

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  121. The events dont add up. Pure fiction.

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  122. This confirms what my friend in Austria told me😳 this ish is true. Exactly as she writes it, some are trapped cos they took oath with the traditional doctors. Most of the went crazy for trying to break the oath...... May we never be a victim of such NO matter d circumstance. My the good Lord help us!

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  123. O ma gaaa o! What a life? My dear reporter, indeed u re brave, despite d danger involved, u still went ahead 2 do ds, God bless u, May ur friend find peace with God IJN...Amen. D kainda evil n inappropriate things people are doing for money is unbelievable, what can possess anyone so much that will ever make any human being to get involved in all of this, Madam Caro n Eno I hope u guyz rot in he'll, oghogho n all those involved in ds bullshit may peace ellude u guyz IJN....amen. May ur portion be d wind, because there is no justification of ds height of evil on a fellow human being like u.

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  124. Now this is blogging.The next level!!! not a story about how my grandfather bought a brand new benz. Pls keep this type of story up that how oprah made it wish u all the best.

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  125. Too scary. God will punish this evil people

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  126. Thnx for the info Linda. Please hire research assistants, re cycling stories from SR and PT is not helping your brand. I crave truth and objectivity. I'm close to moving on.

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  127. Act like one and you will be treated like one of em

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  128. There's more to the story on their website. Just follow Linda's link to premium times and you'll find the other chapters.

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  129. This reporter DAT took dis kind risk dey try oh, I beg I no fit sacrifice my life nd my body 4 report she no go say if dey rape her or NT oh + all d hair way she go dash d native doctors nko? Pls every1 knows the world is so wicked y endanger ur life in d process

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  130. Tinx dy happen.

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  131. HMMMMM. THE TRUTH IS , THERE ARE PEOPLE WHO ARE MUCH MORE AWARE OF HOW THE WORLD FUNCTIONS THAN A LOT OF US.

    THIS INCLUDES THE REAL SECRETS BEHIND THE SUCCESS SOME WILL FLAUNT AND CALL HARD WORK.

    SOME OF THE THINGS THE BIBLE SAYS WILL NEVER MAKE SENSE IF YOU ARE A PERSON WHO ONLY JUDGE THINGS BASED ON OUTWARD APPEARANCE...

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  132. This is very tru lyk err word if u liv in europe u'll noe i stay in france and i visit italy occasionaly and wen sm sae deir storys ehn u'll jus b spechless bt d'fact stil remains dat dey r 2 blame bcos most of dem r nt forced into it dey willingly decide 2 do it some even beg d'so cald madams sef promisin 2 do nytn...dis topic is a lng issue sha

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  133. Strange things are really happening!!!

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  134. Hmmmm God will save us from the hands of thouts we call security operatives kudos to u reporter God bless

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  135. This is a really touching story...God has a purpose for ur life dt is y u survived...I just hope the necessary results of this ur special sss operation will produce d desired result and put an end to dis menace in our society.

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  136. Hmmm, God help us!. Linda don dash nollywood story line... Expct a movie in 1 week!

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  137. Sad story, vry pathetic!... Nollywood will pounce on this,... "the last prostitute escape" part 1-4

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  138. I thought trafficking has long stopped. Nawaoh

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  139. Nigeria has become something else,this is just too sad!May God protect us all

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  140. OMG Tobore is so brave I met while she was still working at compass newspaper and I was a corper even then I could feel the sense of fearless adventure in her eyes Kudos girl

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  141. Please this story doesn't seem real. No doubt these things happen but I'm yet to see or understand her motivation in this case. Oya curses.. #Mr Lucky

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  142. Is this report factual or fictional? Most of this girls are sold into prostitution by their own parents. Greed and love of money leads to all sort of evil.

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  143. Analyzing the facts and locations in this story I can only pray that God help us cause honestly this is end time!

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  144. I really feel like I need to puke right now, this story is sickening. To even think that worse may be happening shreds my heart. God have mercy on us

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  145. They are the ones supplying politicians with human parts. I can't believe that a politician,whose kids are schooling abroad will confidently use another person's kids for ritual purposes. I wish they could put themselves in the shoes of the parents whose kids they have used. And their rich kids drive the latest cars n ppl worship them not knowing the true source of their income

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  146. If this is true,then kudos to the bravest reporter,and a strong woman

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  147. I feel so upset,my fellow officers involved in such wicked act and yet we keep holding meetings on fighting corruption?may God expose all officers involved in this act

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  148. My God dis is terrible, oghogho u r so brave, mama c u wil b behead som day too n for govrnmtal agents all u wil die in soon

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  149. This is fabricated. Reads like fiction. Who goes undercover as a prostitute in Nigeria for the sake of journalism. To what end? She didn't have the backing of any foreign anti-human trafficking organisation. How then could she have made a difference by going undercover. This is all fake. Sure there is a lot of sex trafficking going on in Nigeria and I have some third party experience in this matter. The girls were not graduates but villagers who independently sought visas to go to Italy and link up with friends and relatives who are involved in prostitution and menial jobs. The girls stayed at my house for a couple of nights. They were from my village. Honestly at the time I just thought they were one of the millions trying to escape nigeria for a better life abroad but I realize now they were being trafficked.

    I really don't think this article is in the slightest true. I mean it would make more sense if we were reading how a major human trafficking sydicate was brought down thanks to some brave undercover journalist. But this is all BS and very vague and generic. Few names, addresses, liscense plates, specific descriptions, etc.

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  150. If. Only she had her phone back, Solid and concrete evidence.....but all still tHe Same reporter riSked HEr life......Good Job.

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  151. This is d most 'riskiest' undercover shit I've ever read! I think things like this happen notwithstanding. Which way Nigeria, which way?

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  152. God have mercy on us. Things people would do for money.

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  153. Wonders shall never end, u are brave nne. May GOD help us oo .....people are wicked and heartless .

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  154. Hmmmmmmmm, ma heart is heavy as I read ds, human being be-head a fellow human. No conscience at all. Let d reporter who wrote ds gv mor info to d authorities for the arest of mama caro,Eno n dier cohorts

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  155. Im a young girl of 22, A graduate residing in PH and I see no reason why any girl should go in to prostitution.. I dont have a job yet but I buy satchet water in bags for N55 or N60 and sell for N100(sometimes more). I also sell 1 for N10. I also buy nice quality clothes and sell @ any price I like..Iv being on this for 4years now and I know how much iv been able to save even to start up my own business and grow large from there and I will definitely get my Msc. and a wonderful job. Most girls are greedy, Lazy, Impatient and only prefer to go for the fast cash.. God will surely help you if you are prayerful and hard working but girls won't be patient.. Most of these girls know what they go into.. Most of you don't even know the curse and nemesis that comes after..I only pity those that fall victim out of ignorance. Think about what you do now that you are young cos 1 day you will grow old and see your reflection in your kids and grand kids. May God help us all..

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  156. This is how blockbuster are made.. kindly patent your story. ..


    Secondly, submit it for CNN award

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  157. This is just sad but we should know that human trafficking is not peculiar to Nigeria, eastern Europeans are trafficked for porn and Chinese are trafficked in sealed containers and sail for long period in seas with a lot dying on their way. We as a people should advise our young ones about the dangers in prostitution and human trafficking. Right now in Lagos, we live and witness high class prostitution in residential quarters involving young undergraduates, and some of them are those you asked yourself why they should be involved in this kind of trade. Government should do more, we as a people should do more. Our borders are manned by ordinary Nigerians who support this evil, so its not just the Government but our greed for money.

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  158. omg this is the height of evil God have mercy on their soul.

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  159. Dear Lord!!!!

    Goose pimples all over me.

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  160. Just reading this sent chills down my spine. God help us

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  161. OVOKO!!!!!!!!!!

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  162. To those doubting thomas saying "fabricated,fictions,liars etc" be there o,u people are the ones who usually falls a victim. This is the reason y people don't go extra mile in this country,little support and many doubting thomas with no encouragement. Kudos to that reporter!

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Disclaimer: Opinions expressed in comments are those of the comment writers alone and does not reflect or represent the views of Linda Ikeji.

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