Manipulated, murdered, body mysteriously disappears By Tom Esslemont
When Italian prosecutor Lina Trovato first came across a sex trafficking
suspect called “Mummy”, she sensed she was onto something especially sinister.
The code name had appeared several times in wiretapped conversations
between Nigerian gang members in Italy and their apparently female boss back in
the West African state. “If one of the (trafficked sex worker) girls went
astray, the agents in Italy always informed ‘Mummy’ – otherwise known as the
Queen Bee of Nigerian trafficking – so she could keep her in line,” Trovato
told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. Several months of investigation led police
to swoop in and arrest six people in the Italian cities of Rome, Genoa and
Catania, she said. The six are awaiting trial. Nigerian crime gangs have
proliferated in Italy, controlling an extensive network of prostitutes and
ordering them “on demand” from Nigeria, Italian police and prosecutors say. But
now the Nigerian gangs, who have been active in Italy for more than a decade,
are taking on increasingly violent tactics, including knife crime and even
forging close relations with notorious mafia groups, the Cosa Nostra and the
Camorra, law enforcement agencies in Italy, say.
The overlap with home-grown organised crime groups is troubling for the
police because the Italian mafia dominate the economies in their regions, often
with the help of corrupt or complacent administrators, and they have spread
their tentacles to northern Italy. At least 16 Nigerians have been arrested on
trafficking offences since the start of 2016 in the Catania jurisdiction in Sicily,
up from around 10 the previous year. “Sometimes we are good at breaking the
cycle (of trafficking). But it is very hard,” Trovato, a specialist in
organised crime and mafia, said in Catania city. Italy’s government has not
disclosed the number of arrests in connection with Nigerian trafficking gangs
despite requests from the Thomson Reuters Foundation. Around 12,000 Nigerian
women arrived in Italy by sea in 2015 and 2016, data from the International
Organisation for Migration (IOM) shows – a six-fold increase on the previous
two years. Almost 80 percent of the young women are victims of trafficking,
according to the International Organisation for Migration (IOM), placing law
enforcement agencies under pressure to uproot expanding Nigerian criminal networks,
lawyers say. MAFIA CRIMES As the number of Nigerian trafficking victims rises,
Italian prosecutors – lawyers who gather evidence before presenting it in court
– are finding more and more of their time taken up with unpicking Nigeria’s
criminal networks. Nigerian prostitutes frequently end up working as recruiters
or ‘madams’ for new arrivals from Africa, prosecutors say. These former sex
workers also help with the logistics of slavery, driving trafficking victims to
the cities where they become prostitutes, Trovato said. But trends are
changing. Armed robberies, murders and drug-related crime have spread south to
the Sicilian city of Palermo from larger Nigerian communities in the northern
cities of Turin and Castel Volturno, justice officials say. “It is a compact
community, in which there are lots of people who practice crime,” said Leonardo
Agueci, prosecutor in Palermo’s justice department. Earlier in 2016, the boss
of notorious Nigerian criminal organisation Black Axe was sentenced to 12 years
in jail after a number of Nigerian men were brutally attacked in Palermo. The
incident happened late one night in January 2014 in Palermo’s Ballaro street
market, where police later found the victims with gashed foreheads. “It was the
first time a Palermo court has convicted a Nigerian on mafia-related crimes,”
said Gaspare Spedale, another prosecutor in the Sicilian city. Police fear the
relatively small-time crimes committed by members of the Nigerian gangs in
Palermo might become more serious in a city famous for Italy’s most storied
mafia organisation, the Cosa Nostra, Agueci said. For now, the prosecutors said
there was no evidence mafia were running the Nigerian sex trafficking network
from Palermo, but it could have connections with organised crime gangs on
mainland Italy. “The people who export (Nigerian victims) are in other
countries,” Spedale said. “But there is a mastermind controlling it in Italy.
It exists.” NIGERIAN OMERTA In Palermo’s vibrant Ballaro market, Nigerian
shopkeepers and customers brushed shoulders with Sicilian fruit stallholders
touting bright pink pomegranates and blood-red tomatoes. Nigerian women,
loading their baskets with sardines and olives, refused to answer questions
about the quality of life in Palermo when they were approached by the Thomson
Reuters Foundation. At night, a few hundred metres away, West African women in
short-cut dresses plied their trade in dimly lit streets alongside the port.
Many work for pimps who remain out of sight, local campaigners say. But the
killing in 2011 of one Nigerian trafficking victim still strikes fear in the
community. “Favour” Nike Adekune was murdered in Palermo’s historic centre in a
crime that shocked the 500-strong Nigerian community, according to Nino Rocca,
a local rights activist. Adekune – from Benin City in Nigeria’s southern Edo
State – had been working as a sex worker to pay off debts to her pimps, Rocca
said. After one of Adekune’s clients was convicted of her murder, something
mysterious happened to her body, he said.
“When the corpse was prepared for
burial (months after her death), we noticed that only a few bones remained. We
do not know why,” Rocca told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. “We have no idea
if the mafia or Nigerian (gangs) stole the body.” But he added that some members
of the Nigerian community suspected the local mafia were involved. MAPPING THE
CRIME The macabre nature of more and more crimes committed against Nigerian
women, including black magic or “juju” rituals, is one reason victims are
reluctant to come forward, prosecutors say. Fear plays a large part in Nigerian
juju, with pubic hair, fingernails and blood collected from trafficking victims
as they are made to swear never to report their situation to authorities,
rights groups say. In some cases, fearing the juju “spell” may be turned on
them and they may die, Nigerian parents insist their daughters obey
traffickers, testimony from Italian court documents shows. “One woman we spoke
to was made to swallow an egg whole,” Kevin Hyland, Britain’s anti-slavery commissioner,
said in an interview in London. “It obviously had some kind of drug in it: She
was raped daily.”
Victims of sex trafficking often
do not want to point the finger at the madams or pimps because they are worried
about repercussions or juju, Catania-based prosecutor Lino Trovato said. Even
so, the number of trafficking-related cases in her file has risen. “This year,
I handled about 40 cases, compared with 20 the year before,” Trovato said.
SPANISH PROBLEM TOO The problem is not isolated to Italy. The authorities in
parts of Spain have also been grappling with Nigerian sex trafficking rings. In
Catalonia, 99 percent of prostitution is controlled by organised crime, much of
it by a dominant Nigerian crime group known as the Supreme Eiye Confraternity
(SEC) or Air Lords. It’s a criminal network comparable with the mafioso in
Chicago in the 1930s, said Xavi Cortes, chief of the central unit of human
trafficking at the Mossos d’Esquadra, the Catalan regional police force. “Every
single Nigerian knows who they are,” Cortes said in an interview. “If you ask a
Nigerian boy, he will know who an Eiye is.” But many women who are trafficked
to Spain end up working as ‘madams’, who are essentially pimps who control
prostitutes on the streets of Barcelona, he said. The Mossos’s operations have
led to the jailing of 25 trafficking gang members in the Barcelona region, with
a further 13 currently under a European arrest order because they are abroad”,
the Catalan police chief said. “Experience tells me that, finally, all the
traffickers will find new routes and new ways. It is impossible to stop this
phenomenon: Source: Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson
Reuters, which covers humanitarian news, women’s rights, corruption and climate
change.
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