LAGOS, Nigeria (VOICE OF NAIJA) – The National Association Against Trafficking in Persons (NAATIP) has arrested two Nigerian women for alleged sex trafficking of minors in Gambia.
The StandardNewsGambia reports that the two Nigerian women, identified simply as Jennifer and Viviane, were arrested on 31 July.
According to reports, the arrest came following an investigation launched by a new Gambian investigative outfit, the Guardian Intelligence Investigative Platform.
The investigation, focusing on sex trafficking, was launched a few weeks ago following reports of massive trafficking of young Nigerian girls, some of whom are as young as 15 years.
Jennifer and Viviane were held at the Brusubi and Kairaba Police stations and later released on bail and currently helping the police in their investigations.
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A senior state lawyer told The Guardian Intelligence that sex trafficking is not a capital offence in Gambian laws, and because of that, the alleged offenders can be bailed.
The suspects have since admitted to bringing the girls into the country but insist that the girls knew they were coming to Banjul to trade in sex work. A claim all the girls interviewed by this medium denied.
“I admit that I brought them to The Gambia, but I had informed them they will be doing Asawo (sex work). I never told them they were going to do business or work in a restaurant,” Viviane insisted.
When asked whether she knew the girls were underage and could not have given consent, Viviane said she would not know if the girls had not told her in the first place.
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But one of the girls who was trafficked by Viviane said she was promised that she would work in a restaurant.
“I was shocked when I realised that I was brought to The Gambia to do Asawo (sex work),” she told this medium based on anonymity for safety reasons.
On her part, Jennifer, who is believed to be one of the toughest among the traffickers, had a tough exchange with NAPTIP investigators during the interrogation and insisted she had done nothing wrong.
When approached for comments, she tensely said, “I am unfairly targeted. I have done nothing wrong.”
Investigators have managed to talk to about 10 victims who have given a detailed explanation of the trauma they faced since arriving in the country. One of the victims detailed how she was forced to have sex with a man while seeing her period.
The reporting and prosecuting cases of sex or human trafficking have been a major problem in The Gambia and many countries around the world, the publication reports.