TRAFFICKING RURAL TEENAGE GIRLS AS DOMESTIC SERVANTS
During one of my out-reach programs, I met Blessing (12
years) an orphan that lived with her elder sister (who was 14years) at 2015. I
had asked all the orphans within the community to meet me there so when I asked
her what her care giver does, she said “my sister does boyfriend work since she
ran away from where she was
taken to work as a house-girl (domestic servant)”. Later, I found out that her sister eventually
got pregnant with the boy that feeds them, who was also abusing my girl
(Blessing) as her elder sister refused her from going to the city to become a
domestic servant because of her own experience.
Extreme poverty and lack of education make girls vulnerable
to being trafficked from rural areas to big cities into becoming domestic
servants in Nigeria. The process of
doing this is by having some persons who work as middle persons that liaise
with the rural dwellers in most remote villages and promise to help send these
teenage girls to school and at the same time, pay their parents monthly
stipends.
These middle persons always target underage girls who are
from extreme poor families and arrange with families in the cities who still
pay the middle persons for helping them to bring these rural teenage girls. The girls are forced to work at the dictate
of their ‘madams’ or ógas’ (that is the owners of the house. I met one of these girls (another orphan) who
told me in confidence that her madam (woman of the house) makes her sleep with
her oga (man of the house) anytime she had a fight with her husband as the
madam uses her to settle the fight (that is being an offering of sex for the
man to forgive her madam or for the madam to use and appease to make her
husband happy). She seriously begged me to take away from that town.
Being ignorant, illiterate and unaware of their rights
especially in Nigeria, majority of these teenage girls get trapped in this kind
of lifestyle for almost forever. Their
madams subject them to all kinds of unimaginable activities/chores. Not just that these rural teenagers are
abused sexually; they are physically, emotionally, academically and socially
abused. Majority of them were never sent
to school as was agreed with the middle persons; most of them also appear to
look so malnourished even in the midst of the prosperous wealth of the ogas;
some end up having a very low self-esteem of themselves, exhibiting high level
of depression; and others have serious sudden outbursts of fear and/or anger.
Today, Blessing is in school as one of our (orphans on
scholarship). What can we do to help these numerous rural teenage girls who are being trafficked from the rural
communities to cities with the promise of a better future as domestic servants? We hereby call our government to come up with
policies that can checkmate the trafficking of these rural girls even as we
plead with International Agencies and Non- Governmental Organizations to interfere
and help our rural teenage girls from becoming an object of total abuse.
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