Anti-Trafficking activists were recently honoured in
Washington, D.C. at an event marking the release of the State
Department's 2016 Trafficking in Persons report.
The
U.S. State Department's Anti-Trafficking Heroes came from very
different corners of the world: Nigeria, Cyprus, Pakistan, Russia,
Senegal and they all carry same thing in their pocket or purse: photos
of the
victims they had rescued from human trafficking, stored in their mobile
phones.
Goats and Soda spoke to some of the honorees at NPR's headquarters, including a Nigerian activist Oluremi Kehinde, who
each shared a story about a trafficked victim they have rescued. They 've
been asked not to give the full names of the trafficking victims to
protect their identities.
Oluremi Kehinde works with Africans who
have been trafficked for sex work in Russia. He shared a photo of an
18-year-old Nigerian girl brought to Russia with what she thought was a
student visa, then forced into prostitution.(pictured showing a photo of the Nigerian teen forced to work as a
prostitute in Russia. She was hospitalized because of internal injuries) Below is his story:
"Victims brought for prostitution have their passports taken away from
them. She would have to work to pay up the $50,000 to $60,000 [to her
captors] before she could earn back her freedom. This girl only paid
$15,000, so she was locked up in an apartment where she had to serve
customers. Many victims are threatened that if they run away, their
family in Nigeria would have to pay up — or be harmed.
In the process of working as a prostitute, she had to have anal
intercourse with men. Many times, if the victims refuse, they are
humiliated, beaten up, some are even thrown out a window or killed. So
most victims agree. The girl's large intestine became twisted
and blocked. She could not go to the toilet and became weak with a
serious stomachache. She was dying. But the traffickers didn't help her.
I
found out about this case and I got the police involved. We got her out
of there and into the hospital for surgery. She was crying, "I don't
want to die, I don't want to die."
Four weeks ago, we returned
her to Nigeria and [we are now] working to arrest the people who brought
her to Russia. She is better now, with her parents.
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