Nigerian
police have raided a home in the commercial town of Aba in the
eastern Nigerian state of Abia and freed 16 pregnant young women who
were allegedly being forced to have babies to be offered for sale for
trafficking or other purposes, police said Thursday.
They
said they arrested the man suspected of running the home, adding he
was arrested on similar accusations two years ago but it was unclear
what happened to the previous case or why he had been freed.
“The
operation was carried out by the DSS where 16 expectant mothers, aged
between 17 and 37, were found,” Abia state police spokesman Geofrey
Ogbonna told AFP.
The
DSS is the Department of State Services, a domestic intelligence and
police force.
He
said the raid on Cross Foundation in the southern city of Aba was
carried out on Tuesday and the proprietor, Hyacinth Ndudim Orikara,
had been arrested.
“The
suspect is a serial human trafficker. He claims to be a medical
doctor. I could recall that the same man was arrested in May 2011 and
32 teenage girls were rescued from his home,” he said.
He
said the girls confessed that they had been offered to sell their
babies for between 25,000 and 30,000 naira (around $200), depending
on the sex of the baby.
“I
don’t know what became of the matter and now he has been arrested
again for the same offence,” he said.
A
spokesman for the anti-trafficking agency said it does not have
jurisdiction over such cases and had handed the man back over to
police. He was unsure what occurred after that.
Nigerian
security agents have uncovered a series of alleged baby factories in
recent years, notably in the southeastern part of the country.
Last
month, six pregnant teenage girls were freed in a raid on a house in
Enugu where three people suspected of planning to sell their babies
were arrested.
The
incident came just five days after police in nearby Imo State freed
17 pregnant girls and 11 small children from a home in the town of
Umuaka.
The
girls, aged between 14 and 17, said they had been impregnated by a
23-year-old man who is currently in custody. The owner of the
building is on the run.
Human
trafficking is widespread in west Africa, where children are bought
from their families to work in plantations, mines and factories or as
domestic help.
Others
are sold into prostitution, and less commonly they are tortured or
sacrificed in black magic rituals.
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