British airports such as Gatwick are increasingly used as entry points
to the European Union by Nigerian trafficking gangs seeking
alternatives to perilous Mediterranean Sea crossings, Spanish police
have warned. BBC News quoted a crime squad officer in Barcelona as
saying his team had bust a notorious Nigerian crime organisation
running a network of trafficked prostitutes across the city.
The gang, Supreme Eiye Confraternity (SEC), also "using forged documents and passports to fly its Nigerian victims into places like Gatwick," Xavier Cortes, head of anti-trafficking at Catalonia police, said in a BBC interview.
The gang, Supreme Eiye Confraternity (SEC), also "using forged documents and passports to fly its Nigerian victims into places like Gatwick," Xavier Cortes, head of anti-trafficking at Catalonia police, said in a BBC interview.
The number of people identified as potential victims of human
trafficking in Britain rose by 21 per cent to 3,309 in 2014, the UK's
National Crime Agency (NCA) said last year. The nationality of the
victims was known in only 2,100 cases of which nearly 9 percent were
Nigerian, the agency's data showed. Below is a special report by BBC:
"The world of Nigeria's sex trafficking 'Air Lords'"
Last year, the BBC's Sam Piranty was given access by the Catalan police,
Mossos D'Esquadra, to an investigation into a Nigerian sex-trafficking
gang. He spoke to traffickers and women rescued from sexual slavery
before filming an early morning raid in November, which led to 23
arrests. He also discovered that the gang is now using London as a
gateway into Europe.
It's 08:00 in the Catalan Police Headquarters on the outskirts of
Barcelona and Xavi Cortes, head of the anti-trafficking unit, waits
patiently for his 22 teams to confirm they are in position. Finally, he
gives the order.
Two-hundred-and-fifty officers quietly climb out of their police vans.
Single file, each team approaches a residential building watched by a
few surprised neighbours.
On reaching the door, one of the masked police officers uses his
fingers to count down. Three, two, one. The door is knocked down, the
silence shattered, the officers rush inside.
The raid results in the arrest of the leaders of a Nigerian-based group
running an international sex-trafficking ring in Barcelona. It's known
as the Supreme Eiye Confraternity (SEC), or the Air Lords, and 23
people are now behind bars, with European Arrest Warrants issued for
those who have left the country.
This operation was 18 months in the planning and involved monitoring
more than a million phone calls, tapping dozens of mobile phones and
months of surveillance.
Cortes and his team first came across the group in 2011 during a
forgery investigation, but quickly discovered it was a huge network
trafficking women and drugs.
He asks me to look at his screen. On it is a map detailing all the
locations they have identified where members of the SEC operate. Cities
are marked in Europe, North, West and East Africa, North and South
America, the Middle East and Asia.
Eiye in Yoruba, the main language of south-western Nigeria means
"bird". The group's insignia is an eagle and each city containing
members is called a "nest", with the "mother nest" in Ibadan, about
100km (60 miles) north-east of Lagos.
The group was started at the University of Ibadan in the 1970s, and the
original intention was to make a positive contribution to society.
Over time, however, many members went astray, committing violence in
Nigeria and delving into crime abroad.
The group now traffics human beings and narcotics (cocaine and
marijuana) and forges passports. It has also facilitated the transport
of stolen crude oil into Europe.
"They are able to earn money in many ways, but we are focused on human-trafficking and the victims," says Cortes.
His second-in-command, Alex Escola, then tells me something remarkable.
"You know, one of the tappings showed us that last year, on 7 July,
around 400 members of SEC met in Geneva. They had a big meeting, all
together."
It was an audacious display of arrogance. In a city where many of the
world's global institutions are headquartered, including numerous UN
agencies, a global criminal institution held its own parallel
international gathering and no-one tried to stop it.
Benin City, Nigeria, is a human-trafficking hub, and a good place to observe how the criminal operation works.
After long negotiations, our team manages to speak to a recruiter, whose
job it is to find girls. The recruiter explains that they either
approach girls directly or through their families offering fake jobs
abroad in a supermarket, or as a cleaner.
However, not everyone is tricked. Many women approach the recruiters
themselves, often in full knowledge that they will be working as a
prostitute in Europe. Some parents, also aware of this, approach
recruiters on behalf of their children.
Destiny, who was 19 when she was trafficked to Spain three years ago,
told me she knew sex would be involved but had never imagined she would
be turned into a sex slave.
"If you live in Benin, there are many girls who came back from [Spain]
with lots of money. They told us they had to have sex sometimes," she
says. "We are not stupid but I did not know I would be beaten and raped
and have to have sex every night of the week."
NGOs in Benin City say many of the recruiters now look outside the
major cities in order to find girls who have not heard their warnings
about the reality of life for trafficked women, or the stories of those
like Destiny who have returned and are now alerting others to the
dangers.
Once recruited, the girls are then taken to Lagos or to northern
Nigeria where they are picked up by men known as "coyotes" or
"trolleys"
The journey to Europe is perilous. Wire taps reveal how coyotes
transporting women were stopped by armed groups in the deserts of Niger
or southern Libya demanding thousands of euros for them to pass.
"One phone call from a coyote to SEC showed how a coyote was saying, 'I
have a gun on my head and they want money,'" says Cortes.
A woman who was herself trafficked tells me about other horrors.
"The journey took weeks," says Sarah, who arrived in Spain in 2013 at
the age of 21. "One of the girls kept asking for water. The men did not
like it so they threw her out in the desert in Libya. They left her and
we continued the journey. They told the boss on the phone that she was
killed by terrorists. We were not human beings. We were animals."
Once girls are trafficked across the desert, they are then taken to "keepers", who often rape them before they cross to Europe.
"When we got to Libya they put us in a house," says Sarah. "This is when
I knew we would not be working in a supermarket. One man was taking
care of us. He would have sex with us, rape us. Then I became
pregnant."
Women who insist they will not work as prostitutes are tied up in a
position called "the crocodile". Their hands tied to their feet, they
are left for days with no food or water. Some are left to die as an
example to others.
Keepers often get the women pregnant prior to making the crossing to
Spain. With a child or pregnant, they stand a better chance of not
being deported, and the men can use access to the child as a form of
blackmail to keep the women under control.
Two years ago, at a time when the coyotes reported Libya had become too
dangerous, recorded phone calls show that the girls were taken instead
to Greece, via Yemen, Iran and Turkey. And today, as the Mediterranean
becomes more difficult to cross - and the authorities try harder to
detect traffickers - the SEC has begun to use airports in the UK more
frequently.
"This is a more expensive option for the group," Cortes tells me. "They
use forged documents and passports from Nigeria to fly into places
like Gatwick. The language is also easier for them. These documents are
expensive though and need co-operation of people working in the
government to get."
One evening in Barcelona, I head out with the undercover surveillance
team. At around 10pm, plain-clothes officers in an unmarked car drive
me to Badalona on the edge of the city.
We are taken to a top-floor flat where police have spent hundreds of
hours watching the house opposite. A light is on in the window and
shadows move between the curtains, before someone appears on the
balcony - a madame.
Most of the women that make it to Europe live in flats with a few other
women and their madame - almost always a trafficked woman, who has
managed to pay off her debt. Girls arrive knowing they must earn a sum,
which may be from 30,000 to 60,000 euros (£22,000 to £44,000), before
they will be free.
There are two ranks of madame. Lower-ranking madames prowl the streets -
many on la Rambla, the main tourist strip in the centre of Barcelona -
constantly texting and calling their girls to check on their
whereabouts. Girls are told to earn about 500 euros (£370) a night to
stay in the madame's good books.
But clients, mostly tourists, may pay as little as 20 euros (£15) for sex, so this is often impossible.
After a night's work, girls return home and divide their earnings into
three. One part goes to pay for the flat, the second to pay for food and
the third goes to the SEC. If they are not earning enough or refuse to
work, the madames may beat them.
Higher-ranking madames collect money from their subordinates to pass on to local SEC leaders known as ibakkas. Always men, the ibakkas run the whole operation. They facilitate payment through the hawala system - a form of money transfer based on trust and one that is difficult to trace.
bakkas make sure that if any of their girls step out of line, their
families back home are threatened. Family members have been known to be
abducted and "disappeared" when girls refuse to pay their madames.
One woman, Jessica, who was trafficked to Spain in 2009, says two of her
daughters, now in their early 20s, left home in Benin to escape the
gang. One is in Dubai, the other in Morocco waiting to cross to Spain.
But in escaping one group of traffickers, they have put themselves in the hands of another.
"In order to pay the debt, they will be prostitutes too," says Jessica.
Tragically, this is not an isolated case.
It's a few days after the raid and Cortes seems content. Back in the
office, dressed in full uniform, he details the large quantities of
phones, computers, fake passports and documents seized at the time of
the arrests.
Despite that, there is a hint of frustration in his smile.
"The size of the network means those arrested will be replaced," he says.
According to recent wire taps, one of the major European co-ordinators
of the group is looking to restructure the gang. The ibakka, based in
London, was trying to get his 95 other European counterparts together
for a meeting.
This kind of organised crime cannot simply be tackled locally.
Arresting madames and taking women off the streets merely increases the
demand for more women from Nigeria. This is an organised crime group,
run by men, operating across the world. This is a network which
requires a global police response.
No comments:
Post a Comment