The Nigerian Immigration Service, Oyo
State Command, on Saturday acccused a pastor, Olufemi Timothy, of child trafficking in Ibadan the capital of Oyo state. The command also paraded
12 boys and four girls allegedly being used by the accused persons in a
slavery ring.
The Controller of the command, Innocent
Akatu, said the accused persons were apprehended in various locations in
Ibadan, adding that they would be handed over to the National Agency
for the Prohibition of Traffic in Persons for legal actions.
It was observed that the children were maltreated and starved with tatthered cloth.
One of the children said "I had been in Nigeria for three years without being paid and I could
not recognise places where I had worked or whom I had worked for."
She also added that her mother allowed her to come to Nigeria based on the informaton that she is coming to earn good money.
Akatu said, “Human trafficking is a
serious crime that we are trying to end. We have very young children
being taken away from their parents under the pretext that the
traffickers would get jobs for them or give them a better standard of
living. Many of them are brought into Nigeria from Benin Republic, Togo
and other neighbouring countries. They are sold into slavery by those
who brought them into the country.”
He made reference to a boy of nine years
old, who was brought to Ibadan from Benue by his brother and sold into
slavery, saying, “He does not know where he is. These children do not
receive the wages paid for them. The money goes to the people who
brought them. So it’s pure slavery. In the past, when we arrested
children like these, we reconciled them with their parents. Even the
foreigners would be taken to their countries. But we now felt that the
method did not help to check the problem. That is why we are handing
them over to NAPTIP for appropriate legal action,” Akatu said.
While explaining how Timothy and 12 of
the victims were arrested in Iwo Road area of Ibadan, the controller
said the pastor was arrested with another man who brought the children
from Benin Republic.
In an attempt to exonerate himself, Timothy said he had only come from his farm to help a labourer when he was apprehended.
He said, “I am a pastor and a farmer.
There is a labourer in my farm who called me from Ibadan. He said he was
stranded in the city. I ran down quickly to help him out at Iwo Road.
He had 12 children with him from Benin Republic but I never knew he had
such people in his company.
He was travelling to Ikire with them but
my farm is in Ajoda Farm Settlement. I cannot deny knowing him but all I
was trying to do was to help him, not knowing that he was trafficking
children to Nigeria. I have foreigners in my farm but I don’t know how
they entered into Nigeria. They were already here before I employed
them.”

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