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Grim Tales Of Rape, Child Trafficking In Nigeria’s Displaced Persons Camps - Crime (2) - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Crime / Grim Tales Of Rape, Child Trafficking In Nigeria’s Displaced Persons Camps (12261 Views)

Nigerian Victim Of Sex Trafficking In Italy Tells Her Shocking Story / Enugu’s Child Trafficking Cartel Steals Babies From Mothers, Jail Them (pic) / 7 Women Arrested In Ondo For Prostitution And Child Trafficking (2) (3) (4)

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Re: Grim Tales Of Rape, Child Trafficking In Nigeria’s Displaced Persons Camps by 100Cents: 11:17am On Feb 18, 2015
konny1:
.

What is this ?
Re: Grim Tales Of Rape, Child Trafficking In Nigeria’s Displaced Persons Camps by leke12(m): 11:18am On Feb 18, 2015
This isn't about lack of education or poverty, it's what I called the strong exploiting the weak which has been embedded in humanity especially the black race. Decades ago up till now Africans are know to sell their relatives, friends for materials things. God help us!

1 Like

Re: Grim Tales Of Rape, Child Trafficking In Nigeria’s Displaced Persons Camps by tsdarkside(m): 11:19am On Feb 18, 2015
hey..we have to start to like ourselfs....this is DEATH,,,

a race that can not take care of its self shall PERISH!!!! angry angry angry
Re: Grim Tales Of Rape, Child Trafficking In Nigeria’s Displaced Persons Camps by papercoin(m): 11:19am On Feb 18, 2015
Thread like this you just don't know what to write is it to type sorry or eyahh or send relief materials *how sure it gonna get to them* or start crticizing/giving suggestion to the government.
A hausa proverb;*When the beard of your neighbour is on fire you better rub yours with water*
Re: Grim Tales Of Rape, Child Trafficking In Nigeria’s Displaced Persons Camps by 100Cents: 11:19am On Feb 18, 2015
hotgunz:
I book my copy here... I don't knw any camp except redeemed camp.

Then you have not started..
Re: Grim Tales Of Rape, Child Trafficking In Nigeria’s Displaced Persons Camps by Regiblinkz(m): 11:19am On Feb 18, 2015
Do unto others what u want them to do to you
Re: Grim Tales Of Rape, Child Trafficking In Nigeria’s Displaced Persons Camps by Wolexdey(m): 11:23am On Feb 18, 2015
No to child trafficking. No to rape.

The need to survive, Nigerians biggest challenge...Lord have mercy
Re: Grim Tales Of Rape, Child Trafficking In Nigeria’s Displaced Persons Camps by tsdarkside(m): 11:25am On Feb 18, 2015
Regiblinkz:
Do unto others what u want them to do to you

let them keep on like this,,and we will see what bad nightmare,we will land ourselfs,,, sad
Re: Grim Tales Of Rape, Child Trafficking In Nigeria’s Displaced Persons Camps by Yucee55(m): 11:27am On Feb 18, 2015
People Making Fortune Out of The Misfortune of Others. cry
Re: Grim Tales Of Rape, Child Trafficking In Nigeria’s Displaced Persons Camps by Ayo8(m): 11:28am On Feb 18, 2015
Sometimes I ask myself what the role of the church is in our society... child trafficking is bound to occur in situations like this but the presence of the church being actively involved in these relief camps would put a check on the act of trafficking...
[b][/b]please where are our churches
What role do they play in our society.
resty4:
On a bed at the female ward of the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital laid a 15-year-old girl in an evidently bad state. Her face and head were bandaged, leaving slits through which only a bruised eye and swollen lips were visible. On her body were clearer signs of trauma, with burns running from her neck down to the lower parts of her body.

Around her bed wafted a foul smell, which a nurse who came to attend to her attributed to a septic wound in the girl’s skull.
A nurse who does not want to be named, because she is not authorised to speak to the on the matter, told the icirnigeria.org, that a group of people from the biggest Internally Displaced Persons, IDP, camp in Maiduguri dumped Lami (the surnames of all victims in this report are withheld to protect them) at the hospital.

“We have many of them. They’d been either raped in the camp or sold by those that should be protecting them in the camps,” the nurse said.
Approached by the reporter, Lami tried to speak, but her voice was muffled into a whisper as pains coursed through her body.

She said her parents were killed by Boko Haram insurgents in her village and she managed to reach Maiduguri, capital of Borno State, in an open truck that dropped people off at a camp for displaced persons.
In the course of moving from one camp to the other, she was separated from her younger brother.

“I do not know where he is,” she said through muffled sobs.

How did she end up in the hospital burnt and battered?

Lami said some government officials came to the camp and took many young girls away and later sold them as slaves. She ended up in the house of one Alhaji Aliyu, whose brother and wife abused her. While Aliyu’s brother repeatedly raped her, his wife weighed in with physical abuse.

“One day, some people came to the camp and said that they were taking us to a better place. That was how I got to Alhaji Aliyu’s house and it was there, every day, his brother forcefully slept with me.

“After that, he would beat me and one of Alhaji’s wives too would always beat me. One day she attacked me with a knife. That was how I got the wound in my skull,” she recounted.

Lami’s case, depressingly, is not an isolated one. Hundreds of girls are now being trafficked from some of the IDP camps in the Northeast set up to cater for people displaced by the insurgency, especially unregistered ones.

It was learnt that because many of the camps cannot accommodate all the people displaced from their homes by Boko Haram attacks, many IDPs end up in makeshift unofficial camps close to the officially designated ones or in nearby villages.
The people in the makeshift camps are not officially registered and technically are not under the care of government.
They are usually taken care of by villagers or even relatives in the government-run camps. Somehow, state officials have the same access and control over these unofficial camps.

They ran from their village in Adamawa and are in small unregistered camp in Gombe
A fertile ground for child trafficking
Kingsley Ogar, a staff of an international donor agency, who does not want his organisation named, confirmed that child trafficking is rife in the IDP camps.

“We had a case in Gombe where a group of persons came from the South, Lagos or Ibadan, we can’t be so sure, paid some people and took away children from the camp.

“We went to deliver relief items in this particular IDP Camp and took a census so that we could come back the following day, which we did, only to realize that over a dozen of them were missing. They were mostly young children between the ages of 5 and 15. “Upon investigation we discovered that some “lords” in the camp were in partnership with the Lagos people to sell the kids.
“We reported to the police (Gombe State command), but we do not know whether they have done anything,” he said.
Our reporter learnt of an IDP camp in Yola where there were said to be about 900 children without parents. It was alleged that children were being sold and trafficked in the camp.

Our reporter visited the camp posing as an official of a church that takes care of children and made startling discoveries. An official in the camp named Raila, who wore the reflective vest of the National Emergency Management Agency, NEMA, told the reporter to wait while she went into a makeshift office. There, she spoke with a male colleague, whom she said is an official of NEMA.

She returned to announce: “You will pay N50,000.for each child and you can only go with three if you want them today,” as if she was in a livestock market.

Apparently not totally devoid of conscience, she tried to rationalise her illicit trade. “We use the money to take care of the other children still here,” she said.

Without any attempt at verifying the reporter’s identity and in less than 30 minutes, three children were ready to be sold, possibly never to return to their roots.
Further investigations revealed that such child trafficking business is a thriving and well-run racket in most IDP camps in the insurgency ravaged North east. It is a triangular manifestation of evil that comprises some heartless displaced persons, unscrupulous camp officials and child traffickers.

Displaced persons who know the children without parents act as middlemen between the buyer and the seller. They liaise with people who come from places as far flung as Akwa Ibom, Lagos, Abuja, Katsina, to carry out the first step in the trafficking process.
The displaced person also identifies the children to be sold and goes ahead to negotiate a price, which, it was gathered, could range from as little as N10,000 to as much as N100,000. After negotiations, the middleman approaches the camp official in charge. The official collects the money and approves the release of the kids.

The child trafficker, we gathered, then re-sells the children to an interested family as a domestic servant or slave.
Like Lami, many, if not all of these children, have very little education. They have little knowledge of their rights and no clue as to how to return home. Those they entrusted their lives with at the IDP camps liaise with the traffickers and agents exploiting their vulnerability in this hideous transaction.

http://www.premiumtimesng.com/investigationspecial-reports/176005-investigation-grim-tales-rape-child-trafficking-nigerias-displaced-persons-camps.html
Re: Grim Tales Of Rape, Child Trafficking In Nigeria’s Displaced Persons Camps by Nobody: 11:29am On Feb 18, 2015
This is just so SAD cry cry. I cringed reading lami's experience.
Re: Grim Tales Of Rape, Child Trafficking In Nigeria’s Displaced Persons Camps by brighter: 11:30am On Feb 18, 2015
How & when did we debase to this level?
Re: Grim Tales Of Rape, Child Trafficking In Nigeria’s Displaced Persons Camps by hotgunz(m): 11:30am On Feb 18, 2015
100Cents:


Then you have not started..
ok sir
Re: Grim Tales Of Rape, Child Trafficking In Nigeria’s Displaced Persons Camps by 100Cents: 11:34am On Feb 18, 2015
hotgunz:
ok sir

Visit Boko haram Camp inside Sambisa..
Re: Grim Tales Of Rape, Child Trafficking In Nigeria’s Displaced Persons Camps by IbileIfe: 11:36am On Feb 18, 2015
resty4:
On a bed at the female ward of the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital laid a 15-year-old girl in an evidently bad state. Her face and head were bandaged, leaving slits through which only a bruised eye and swollen lips were visible. On her body were clearer signs of trauma, with burns running from her neck down to the lower parts of her body.

Around her bed wafted a foul smell, which a nurse who came to attend to her attributed to a septic wound in the girl’s skull.
A nurse who does not want to be named, because she is not authorised to speak to the on the matter, told the icirnigeria.org, that a group of people from the biggest Internally Displaced Persons, IDP, camp in Maiduguri dumped Lami (the surnames of all victims in this report are withheld to protect them) at the hospital.

“We have many of them. They’d been either raped in the camp or sold by those that should be protecting them in the camps,” the nurse said.
Approached by the reporter, Lami tried to speak, but her voice was muffled into a whisper as pains coursed through her body.

She said her parents were killed by Boko Haram insurgents in her village and she managed to reach Maiduguri, capital of Borno State, in an open truck that dropped people off at a camp for displaced persons.
In the course of moving from one camp to the other, she was separated from her younger brother.

“I do not know where he is,” she said through muffled sobs.

How did she end up in the hospital burnt and battered?

[size=48pt]Lami said some government officials came to the camp and took many young girls away and later sold them as slaves. She ended up in the house of one Alhaji Aliyu, whose brother and wife abused her. While Aliyu’s brother repeatedly raped her, his wife weighed in with physical abuse.

“One day, some people came to the camp and said that they were taking us to a better place. That was how I got to Alhaji Aliyu’s house and it was there, every day, his brother forcefully slept with me.[/size]

“After that, he would beat me and one of Alhaji’s wives too would always beat me. One day she attacked me with a knife. That was how I got the wound in my skull,” she recounted.

Lami’s case, depressingly, is not an isolated one. Hundreds of girls are now being trafficked from some of the IDP camps in the Northeast set up to cater for people displaced by the insurgency, especially unregistered ones.

It was learnt that because many of the camps cannot accommodate all the people displaced from their homes by Boko Haram attacks, many IDPs end up in makeshift unofficial camps close to the officially designated ones or in nearby villages.
The people in the makeshift camps are not officially registered and technically are not under the care of government.
They are usually taken care of by villagers or even relatives in the government-run camps. Somehow, state officials have the same access and control over these unofficial camps.

They ran from their village in Adamawa and are in small unregistered camp in Gombe
A fertile ground for child trafficking
Kingsley Ogar, a staff of an international donor agency, who does not want his organisation named, confirmed that child trafficking is rife in the IDP camps.

“We had a case in Gombe where a group of persons came from the South, Lagos or Ibadan, we can’t be so sure, paid some people and took away children from the camp.

“We went to deliver relief items in this particular IDP Camp and took a census so that we could come back the following day, which we did, only to realize that over a dozen of them were missing. They were mostly young children between the ages of 5 and 15. “Upon investigation we discovered that some “lords” in the camp were in partnership with the Lagos people to sell the kids.
“We reported to the police (Gombe State command), but we do not know whether they have done anything,” he said.
Our reporter learnt of an IDP camp in Yola where there were said to be about 900 children without parents. It was alleged that children were being sold and trafficked in the camp.

Our reporter visited the camp posing as an official of a church that takes care of children and made startling discoveries. An official in the camp named Raila, who wore the reflective vest of the National Emergency Management Agency, NEMA, told the reporter to wait while she went into a makeshift office. There, she spoke with a male colleague, whom she said is an official of NEMA.

She returned to announce: “You will pay N50,000.for each child and you can only go with three if you want them today,” as if she was in a livestock market.

Apparently not totally devoid of conscience, she tried to rationalise her illicit trade. “We use the money to take care of the other children still here,” she said.

Without any attempt at verifying the reporter’s identity and in less than 30 minutes, three children were ready to be sold, possibly never to return to their roots.
Further investigations revealed that such child trafficking business is a thriving and well-run racket in most IDP camps in the insurgency ravaged North east. It is a triangular manifestation of evil that comprises some heartless displaced persons, unscrupulous camp officials and child traffickers.

Displaced persons who know the children without parents act as middlemen between the buyer and the seller. They liaise with people who come from places as far flung as Akwa Ibom, Lagos, Abuja, Katsina, to carry out the first step in the trafficking process.
The displaced person also identifies the children to be sold and goes ahead to negotiate a price, which, it was gathered, could range from as little as N10,000 to as much as N100,000. After negotiations, the middleman approaches the camp official in charge. The official collects the money and approves the release of the kids.

The child trafficker, we gathered, then re-sells the children to an interested family as a domestic servant or slave.
Like Lami, many, if not all of these children, have very little education. They have little knowledge of their rights and no clue as to how to return home. Those they entrusted their lives with at the IDP camps liaise with the traffickers and agents exploiting their vulnerability in this hideous transaction.

http://www.premiumtimesng.com/investigationspecial-reports/176005-investigation-grim-tales-rape-child-trafficking-nigerias-displaced-persons-camps.html

[size=14pt]This is what President Goodluck Jonathan and PDP have turned Nigeria to.
When Chief Olusegun Obasanjo said President Jonathan wants to destroy Nigeria, ignorant fools don't know the facts of the security reports Chief Obasanjo received.[/size]
Re: Grim Tales Of Rape, Child Trafficking In Nigeria’s Displaced Persons Camps by mavelo: 11:38am On Feb 18, 2015
Wickedness!!!
Re: Grim Tales Of Rape, Child Trafficking In Nigeria’s Displaced Persons Camps by infogenius(m): 11:41am On Feb 18, 2015
Thank God in whatever position you are now.

Speechless and in tears for these children.
But definitely they have a future.

IbileIfe:


[size=14pt]This is what President Goodluck Jonathan and PDP have turned Nigeria to.
When Chief Olusegun Obasanjo said President Jonathan wants to destroy Nigeria, ignorant fools don't know the facts of the security reports Chief Obasanjo received.[/size]

The girl said does not mean she knows who government officials are.
Possibly what she heard. Which in most cases may not be true.
Abeg reason properly.
Re: Grim Tales Of Rape, Child Trafficking In Nigeria’s Displaced Persons Camps by GodsKate: 11:42am On Feb 18, 2015
Keep up with news/events/business/research/.... at lower cost:---
Mtn&Etisalat data available@cheaper rates for your mobile phones&via modem.
(Mtn1gb=N1200/1300, etisalat1gb=N1400/1500).
Call/SMS/Whatspp:
GK on 08032719286
Or
HC on 08033756845 to order
Re: Grim Tales Of Rape, Child Trafficking In Nigeria’s Displaced Persons Camps by Nobody: 11:43am On Feb 18, 2015
"The belief in a supernatural source of evil is not necessary; men alone are quite capable of every wickedness."

Joseph Conrad
Re: Grim Tales Of Rape, Child Trafficking In Nigeria’s Displaced Persons Camps by skyprofm(m): 11:46am On Feb 18, 2015
Sincerely we need a govt dat will install humanity and discipline in people, not one who will use technology to fight crime and corruption. I wonder what sort of technology would be used to fight a case of child abuse and trafficking.


God help us all.
GMB for President
GEJ for Otueke local govt ward A councelor.

1 Like

Re: Grim Tales Of Rape, Child Trafficking In Nigeria’s Displaced Persons Camps by Muzikluva(m): 11:50am On Feb 18, 2015
This is really bad!!!
Re: Grim Tales Of Rape, Child Trafficking In Nigeria’s Displaced Persons Camps by captain1990(f): 11:50am On Feb 18, 2015
This story is so true,my neighbour at Abia state patronized these human traffickers and they sold her a girl named Naomi by name,the girl should be 18 or 19 years of age.This woman treated this girl so bad that she climbed our compound fence and ran away one day in the middle of the night.Up till now,no one knows her whereabouts.FG should really put an end to this inhumanity, its bad
Re: Grim Tales Of Rape, Child Trafficking In Nigeria’s Displaced Persons Camps by Cutehector(m): 11:50am On Feb 18, 2015
And the Lord will say to those on d left, depart from me, u agents of darkness. I was hungry and u didn't fEed me, I was naked and u ddnt cloth me. Be cast into the bottomless pit.
Re: Grim Tales Of Rape, Child Trafficking In Nigeria’s Displaced Persons Camps by dayjee: 11:58am On Feb 18, 2015
GOD help us
Re: Grim Tales Of Rape, Child Trafficking In Nigeria’s Displaced Persons Camps by kraftykc(m): 11:58am On Feb 18, 2015
This country has an unaccountable number of churches, mosques and other places of worship that would make other countries cringe in the belief that they are godless and immoral but that reality is so far from the truth, we are a godless society that revels in the macabre and sadistic torture of our countrymen once they are not of our tribe our common identity.


Now this ineffectual government better step up, some things are actually more important than campaigning.

4 Likes 1 Share

Re: Grim Tales Of Rape, Child Trafficking In Nigeria’s Displaced Persons Camps by JeffreyJamez(m): 12:06pm On Feb 18, 2015
Smh.... all you people shouting "government this, government that" is it government that'll solve everything for you...... Nigerians always blaming everything on government... make una dey use brain before una talk....this situation is about Morals.... Africans especially Nigerians lack human sympathy.....the evil in a black man's mind will make the devil cringe, yet na we go church and mosque pass.... you go just wake up, go up north, go buy person pikin in the name of "househelp" only to maltreat the pikin anyhow...

Sometimes I wonder what God is doing up there sef watching all this evil take place.mchew...

Quote me wrongly and the devil will visit your family

*climbs plantain leaf and flies off*

1 Like

Re: Grim Tales Of Rape, Child Trafficking In Nigeria’s Displaced Persons Camps by Feraz(m): 12:09pm On Feb 18, 2015
Most times we blame the government but what about the followers? Why are we this wicked? To think those put in charge of taking care of the displaced engage in this despicable act speaks volumes about the kind of humans we have.

Govt sets up a camp to take care of people displaced due to insurgency; new ones come and instead of registering them, they are sold for selfish gains and they claim 'the money is being used to take care of others.

We really need to check and reorient ourselves on why human life, no matter where we are from is valuable.

2 Likes

Re: Grim Tales Of Rape, Child Trafficking In Nigeria’s Displaced Persons Camps by akinades71(m): 12:15pm On Feb 18, 2015
This is part of the ripples effect of Boko Haram insurgency.God will sure wipe them out.
Re: Grim Tales Of Rape, Child Trafficking In Nigeria’s Displaced Persons Camps by Totfulguy: 12:18pm On Feb 18, 2015
resty4:
On a bed at the female ward of the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital laid a 15-year-old girl in an evidently bad state. Her face and head were bandaged, leaving slits through which only a bruised eye and swollen lips were visible. On her body were clearer signs of trauma, with burns running from her neck down to the lower parts of her body.

Around her bed wafted a foul smell, which a nurse who came to attend to her attributed to a septic wound in the girl’s skull.
A nurse who does not want to be named, because she is not authorised to speak to the on the matter, told the icirnigeria.org, that a group of people from the biggest Internally Displaced Persons, IDP, camp in Maiduguri dumped Lami (the surnames of all victims in this report are withheld to protect them) at the hospital.

“We have many of them. They’d been either raped in the camp or sold by those that should be protecting them in the camps,” the nurse said.
Approached by the reporter, Lami tried to speak, but her voice was muffled into a whisper as pains coursed through her body.

She said her parents were killed by Boko Haram insurgents in her village and she managed to reach Maiduguri, capital of Borno State, in an open truck that dropped people off at a camp for displaced persons.
In the course of moving from one camp to the other, she was separated from her younger brother.

“I do not know where he is,” she said through muffled sobs.

How did she end up in the hospital burnt and battered?

Lami said some government officials came to the camp and took many young girls away and later sold them as slaves. She ended up in the house of one Alhaji Aliyu, whose brother and wife abused her. While Aliyu’s brother repeatedly raped her, his wife weighed in with physical abuse.

“One day, some people came to the camp and said that they were taking us to a better place. That was how I got to Alhaji Aliyu’s house and it was there, every day, his brother forcefully slept with me.

“After that, he would beat me and one of Alhaji’s wives too would always beat me. One day she attacked me with a knife. That was how I got the wound in my skull,” she recounted.

Lami’s case, depressingly, is not an isolated one. Hundreds of girls are now being trafficked from some of the IDP camps in the Northeast set up to cater for people displaced by the insurgency, especially unregistered ones.

It was learnt that because many of the camps cannot accommodate all the people displaced from their homes by Boko Haram attacks, many IDPs end up in makeshift unofficial camps close to the officially designated ones or in nearby villages.
The people in the makeshift camps are not officially registered and technically are not under the care of government.
They are usually taken care of by villagers or even relatives in the government-run camps. Somehow, state officials have the same access and control over these unofficial camps.

They ran from their village in Adamawa and are in small unregistered camp in Gombe
A fertile ground for child trafficking
Kingsley Ogar, a staff of an international donor agency, who does not want his organisation named, confirmed that child trafficking is rife in the IDP camps.

“We had a case in Gombe where a group of persons came from the South, Lagos or Ibadan, we can’t be so sure, paid some people and took away children from the camp.

“We went to deliver relief items in this particular IDP Camp and took a census so that we could come back the following day, which we did, only to realize that over a dozen of them were missing. They were mostly young children between the ages of 5 and 15. “Upon investigation we discovered that some “lords” in the camp were in partnership with the Lagos people to sell the kids.
“We reported to the police (Gombe State command), but we do not know whether they have done anything,” he said.
Our reporter learnt of an IDP camp in Yola where there were said to be about 900 children without parents. It was alleged that children were being sold and trafficked in the camp.

Our reporter visited the camp posing as an official of a church that takes care of children and made startling discoveries. An official in the camp named Raila, who wore the reflective vest of the National Emergency Management Agency, NEMA, told the reporter to wait while she went into a makeshift office. There, she spoke with a male colleague, whom she said is an official of NEMA.

She returned to announce: “You will pay N50,000.for each child and you can only go with three if you want them today,” as if she was in a livestock market.

Apparently not totally devoid of conscience, she tried to rationalise her illicit trade. “We use the money to take care of the other children still here,” she said.

Without any attempt at verifying the reporter’s identity and in less than 30 minutes, three children were ready to be sold, possibly never to return to their roots.
Further investigations revealed that such child trafficking business is a thriving and well-run racket in most IDP camps in the insurgency ravaged North east. It is a triangular manifestation of evil that comprises some heartless displaced persons, unscrupulous camp officials and child traffickers.

Displaced persons who know the children without parents act as middlemen between the buyer and the seller. They liaise with people who come from places as far flung as Akwa Ibom, Lagos, Abuja, Katsina, to carry out the first step in the trafficking process.
The displaced person also identifies the children to be sold and goes ahead to negotiate a price, which, it was gathered, could range from as little as N10,000 to as much as N100,000. After negotiations, the middleman approaches the camp official in charge. The official collects the money and approves the release of the kids.

The child trafficker, we gathered, then re-sells the children to an interested family as a domestic servant or slave.
Like Lami, many, if not all of these children, have very little education. They have little knowledge of their rights and no clue as to how to return home. Those they entrusted their lives with at the IDP camps liaise with the traffickers and agents exploiting their vulnerability in this hideous transaction.

http://www.premiumtimesng.com/investigationspecial-reports/176005-investigation-grim-tales-rape-child-trafficking-nigerias-displaced-persons-camps.html

Heartrending!
Re: Grim Tales Of Rape, Child Trafficking In Nigeria’s Displaced Persons Camps by Nobody: 12:20pm On Feb 18, 2015
.
Re: Grim Tales Of Rape, Child Trafficking In Nigeria’s Displaced Persons Camps by HopeAtHand: 12:22pm On Feb 18, 2015
100Cents:
They raped her in the name of Allah.

May Allah punish then.

The way hausas crave after small under aged girls is baffling.

What will a man be doing with a 13 year old girl ?

Ask your fellow muslim brother Yerima what interest him in 13year olds..

Prophet Mohammed must have been a paedophile...and so are his followers including you.

Bunch of fvckers.
Re: Grim Tales Of Rape, Child Trafficking In Nigeria’s Displaced Persons Camps by IbileIfe: 12:23pm On Feb 18, 2015
[size=14pt]Even the unfortunate victims of Boko Haram are not safe in the IDPs camps.
Only God knows the fate of the hundreds of Nigerian refugees in the neigbouring countries.
What happened to the millions of naira raised for the welfare of the IDPs and other victims of Boko Haram?
GEJ and PDP have destroyed Nigeria.
Now I know why OBJ tore his PDP membership card!
And people are still supporting this administration?
Are you people cursed and hypnotized under their evil spell?[/size]

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