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Inside The Nigerian 'Miracle' Fertility Scam In Anambra State - Crime - Nairaland

Nairaland ForumNairaland GeneralCrimeInside The Nigerian 'Miracle' Fertility Scam In Anambra State (26998 Views)

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Inside The Nigerian 'Miracle' Fertility Scam In Anambra State by malali(op): 10:21am On Nov 25, 2024
Chioma is adamant that Hope, the baby boy she is holding in her arms, is her son.  After eight years of failed attempts to conceive, she sees him as her miracle baby.

“I’m the owner of my baby,” she says defiantly.

She’s sitting next to her husband, Ike, in the office of a Nigerian state official who spends the best part of an hour interrogating the couple.

As the commissioner for women affairs and social welfare in Anambra state, Ify Obinabo has plenty of experience in resolving family disputes - but this is no ordinary disagreement.

Five members of Ike’s family, who are also present in the room, do not believe Hope is the couple’s biological child, as Chioma and Ike claim.

Chioma claims to have “carried” the child for about 15 months.
The commissioner and Ike’s family are in disbelief at the absurdity of the claim.

Chioma says she faced pressure from Ike’s family to conceive. They even asked him to marry another woman.

In her desperation, she visited a “clinic” offering an unconventional “treatment” - an outlandish and disturbing scam preying on women desperate to become mothers that involves the trafficking of babies.

The BBC was allowed by authorities to sit in on the commissioner's discussion with Chioma as part of our investigation into the cryptic pregnancy scam.

We have changed the names of Chioma, Ike and others in this article to protect them from reprisal in their communities.

State commissioner Ify Obinabo, wearing a brown dress with gold embroidery, listens to Chioma give her account of what happened. Chioma's back is in the foreground, out of focus.
State commissioner Ify Obinabo is trying to crack down on the scam
Nigeria has one of the highest birth rates in the world, with women often facing social pressure to conceive and even ostracisation or abuse if they cannot.


Under this pressure, some women go to extremes to realise their dream of motherhood.

For over a year, BBC Africa Eye has been investigating the “cryptic pregnancy” scam.

Scammers posing as doctors or nurses convince women that they have a “miracle fertility treatment” guaranteed to get them pregnant. The initial “treatment” usually costs hundreds of dollars and consists of an injection, a drink, or a substance inserted into the vagina.

None of the women or officials we spoke to during our investigation know for sure what is in these drugs. But some women have told us they led to changes in their bodies - such as swollen stomachs - which further convinced them they were pregnant.

Women given the “treatment” are warned not to visit any conventional doctors or hospitals, as no scan or pregnancy test would detect “the baby”, which the scammers claim is growing outside the womb.

When it’s time to “deliver” the baby, women are told labour will only begin once they are induced with a “rare and expensive drug”, requiring further payment.

Accounts of how the “delivery” happens vary, but all are disturbing. Some are sedated only to wake up with a Caesarean-like incision mark. Others say they are given an injection that causes a drowsy, hallucinatory state in which they believe they’re giving birth.

Either way, the women end up with babies they are supposed to have given birth to.

Chioma tells commissioner Obinabo that when her time to “deliver” came, the so-called doctor injected her in the waist and told her to push. She does not spell out how she ended up with Hope, but says the delivery was “painful”.

"Dr Ruth" sits in the dark, lit by torchlight, wearing a white trouser suit
"Dr Ruth" runs a fake pregnancy clinic in the state of Anambra
Our team manages to infiltrate one of these secretive “clinics” - connecting with a woman known as “Dr Ruth” to her clients - by posing as a couple who have been trying to conceive for eight years.

This so-called "Dr Ruth" runs her clinic every second Saturday of the month in a dilapidated hotel in the town of Ihiala, in the south-eastern Anambra state. Outside her room, dozens of women wait for her in the hotel corridors, some with visibly protruding stomachs.

The whole atmosphere is buzzing with positivity. At one point, huge celebrations erupt inside the room after a woman is told she is pregnant.

When it’s our undercover reporters’ turn to see her, "Dr Ruth" tells them the treatment is guaranteed to work.

She offers the woman an injection, claiming it will enable the couple to “select” the sex of their future baby - a medical impossibility.

After they turn down the injection, "Dr Ruth" hands them a sachet of crushed pills as well as some more pills for them to take at home, along with instructions on when to have intercourse.

This initial treatment costs 350,000 naira ($205; £165).

Our undercover reporter neither takes the drugs nor follows any of "Dr Ruth’s" instructions and returns to see her four weeks later.

After running a device that looks like an ultrasound scanner across our reporter’s stomach, a sound like a heartbeat is heard and "Dr Ruth" congratulates her on being pregnant.

They both cheer with joy.

After delivering the good news, "Dr Ruth" explains how they’ll need to pay for a “scarce” and expensive drug needed for the baby to be born, costing somewhere between 1.5 and two million naira ($1,180; £945).

Without this drug, the pregnancy could extend beyond nine months, "Dr Ruth" claims with disregard for scientific fact, adding: “The baby will become malnourished - we’d need to build it up again.”

"Dr Ruth" has not responded to allegations the BBC has put to her.

Women in brightly coloured, ornate dresses are stood waiting in a corridor
Dozens of women were waiting to see "Dr Ruth"
The extent to which the women involved genuinely believe the claims is unclear.

But clues as to why they would be susceptible to such brazen lies can, in part, be found in online groups where disinformation around pregnancy is widespread.

A network of disinformation
Cryptic pregnancy is a recognised medical phenomenon, in which a woman is unaware of her pregnancy until the late stages.

But during our investigation, the BBC found widespread misinformation in Facebook groups and pages about this type of pregnancy.

One woman from the US, who dedicates her entire page to her “cryptic pregnancy", claims to have been pregnant “for years” and that her journey cannot be explained by science.

In closed groups on Facebook, many posts use religious terminology to hail the bogus “treatment” as a “miracle” for those who’ve been unable to conceive.

All of this misinformation helps solidify women’s belief in the scam.

Members of these groups are not only from Nigeria, but also from South Africa, the Caribbean, and the US.

The scammers also sometimes manage, and post in, these groups, enabling them to reach out to women expressing an interest in the "treatment".

Once someone expresses readiness to start the scam process, they are invited into more secure WhatsApp groups. There, admins share information about “cryptic clinics” and what the process involves.

I’m still confused
Authorities tell us that to complete the “treatment”, the scammers need new-born babies and to do that they seek out women who are desperate and vulnerable, many of them young and pregnant, in a country where abortion is illegal.

In February 2024, the Anambra state health ministry raided the facility where Chioma “delivered” Hope.

The BBC obtained footage of the raid, which showed a huge complex made up of two buildings.

In one were rooms containing medical equipment - apparently for clients - while in the other were several pregnant women being kept against their will. Some were as young as 17.

Some tell us they were tricked into going there, unaware their babies would be sold to the scammer’s clients.

Others, like Uju, which is not her real name, felt too scared to tell their family they were pregnant and sought a way out. She said she was offered 800,000 naira ($470; £380) for the baby.

Asked if she regrets her decision to sell her baby, she says: “I’m still confused.”

Commissioner Obinabo, who has been part of efforts in her state to crack down on the scam, says scammers prey on vulnerable women like Uju to source the babies.

A baby boy is cradled in his mother's arms
Uju would have sold her baby, had authorities not rescued her
At the end of a tense interrogation, commissioner Obinabo threatens to take away baby Hope from Chioma.

But Chioma pleads her case, and the commissioner eventually accepts her explanation that she is a victim herself and that she hadn’t realised what was going on.

On this basis she allows Chioma and Ike to keep the baby - unless the biological parents come forward to claim him.

But unless attitudes towards women, infertility, reproductive rights and adoption change, scams like this will continue to thrive, experts warn.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c78dyryreyxo

Re: Inside The Nigerian 'Miracle' Fertility Scam In Anambra State by malali(op): 10:22am On Nov 25, 2024
Short Summary

Chioma, after years of trying to conceive, believes Hope, the child she is holding, is her miracle baby. However, her husband’s family doubts this claim, and a state commissioner, Ify Obinabo, is investigating the matter. Chioma recounts how, under pressure to conceive, she visited a controversial “clinic” offering an unproven fertility treatment, which involved fake pregnancy scams.

The clinic’s operators, like the infamous “Dr. Ruth”, claim to offer a “miracle” treatment that guarantees pregnancy but leads to a disturbing process where women are deceived into thinking they’re pregnant after receiving mysterious injections or pills. The final stages involve the delivery of babies in a hallucinatory or sedated state. Many women are told they need additional drugs, costing up to $2,000, to ensure the delivery of the baby.

Chioma’s case is a part of a broader issue in Nigeria, where scammers prey on women desperate to become mothers, often using misleading claims and manipulating vulnerable women. In some cases, babies are sold, and women are exploited into carrying pregnancies without their knowledge.

Authorities are cracking down on these operations, but the lack of legal abortion and societal pressure on women to have children continues to fuel these scams. In Chioma’s case, despite her confusing and distressing experience, the commissioner allowed her to keep Hope for now, though the investigation is ongoing.
Re: Inside The Nigerian 'Miracle' Fertility Scam In Anambra State by advanceDNA: 10:47am On Nov 25, 2024
Long con...
Re: Inside The Nigerian 'Miracle' Fertility Scam In Anambra State by Righthussle: 11:15am On Nov 25, 2024
Comot body for anything wey concern miracle, na fake.
Re: Inside The Nigerian 'Miracle' Fertility Scam In Anambra State by NSNO(m): 11:35am On Nov 25, 2024
Some women can be exceptionally gullible undecided

Nlfpmod please move to front page.
Re: Inside The Nigerian 'Miracle' Fertility Scam In Anambra State by 900warriorz: 12:24pm On Nov 25, 2024
What did I just read shocked
Re: Inside The Nigerian 'Miracle' Fertility Scam In Anambra State by bosschinalu(m): 12:25pm On Nov 25, 2024
GOD ABEG!!!


Wee never learn in this part of the world.
Re: Inside The Nigerian 'Miracle' Fertility Scam In Anambra State by Lovelife433(m): 12:25pm On Nov 25, 2024
Scammer
Re: Inside The Nigerian 'Miracle' Fertility Scam In Anambra State by OkpaNsukkaisBae(m): 12:26pm On Nov 25, 2024
This is one of the reason I'll always cherish the day I left religion
Re: Inside The Nigerian 'Miracle' Fertility Scam In Anambra State by oglalasioux(m): 12:27pm On Nov 25, 2024
NSNO:
Some women can be exceptionally gullible undecided
Even educated women.
Re: Inside The Nigerian 'Miracle' Fertility Scam In Anambra State by YeyeGbami:
na today? we know those who run the game steady.
Re: Inside The Nigerian 'Miracle' Fertility Scam In Anambra State by Offpoint1: 12:29pm On Nov 25, 2024
grin
Re: Inside The Nigerian 'Miracle' Fertility Scam In Anambra State by MrBanner(m): 12:30pm On Nov 25, 2024
Preciousgift75:
They're lot of scammers.
Just like you, Mr OLAOLUWA TUNDE OTUKOMAYA AKA “ZAINAB OPEYEMI SALIU”
Re: Inside The Nigerian 'Miracle' Fertility Scam In Anambra State by justmondris:
OkpaNsukkaisBae:
This is one of the reason I'll always cherish the day I left religion
You guys always drag religion to everything just to feel good. What does religion have to do with this? Is there any religion book where their members are encouraged to defraud people?
Re: Inside The Nigerian 'Miracle' Fertility Scam In Anambra State by TableLeg(m): 12:33pm On Nov 25, 2024
If she says she is the owner of the baby, then she is the owner.
End.
Re: Inside The Nigerian 'Miracle' Fertility Scam In Anambra State by JASONjnr(m): 12:33pm On Nov 25, 2024
Lol
Re: Inside The Nigerian 'Miracle' Fertility Scam In Anambra State by Kobicove(m): 12:34pm On Nov 25, 2024
This miracle baby scam is not a new thing, it has been going on for years! undecided

I fully understand the plight of women who are having difficulty conceiving but then that is not an excuse to allow child trafficking
Re: Inside The Nigerian 'Miracle' Fertility Scam In Anambra State by Sonnobax15(m): 12:34pm On Nov 25, 2024
lipsrsealed
The sweetest thing that has ever happened to my heart recently is the fact that my banny isn't a Christian......If not,this our relationship for no pass first half undecided
Re: Inside The Nigerian 'Miracle' Fertility Scam In Anambra State by BabaCommander: 12:39pm On Nov 25, 2024
embarassed
Religion and ignorance are twin deadly killers...
Re: Inside The Nigerian 'Miracle' Fertility Scam In Anambra State by Kobicove(m): 12:39pm On Nov 25, 2024
TableLeg:
If she says she is the owner of the baby, then she is the owner.
End.
Then let her prove it scientifically
Re: Inside The Nigerian 'Miracle' Fertility Scam In Anambra State by travelzcruix: 12:39pm On Nov 25, 2024
May no woman go through the trauma of childlessness. Advice your female children to give birth early and your males to coordinate and start providing.
Re: Inside The Nigerian 'Miracle' Fertility Scam In Anambra State by smokinloud(m): 12:39pm On Nov 25, 2024
Sonnobax15:
lipsrsealed
The sweetest thing that has ever happened to my heart recently is the fact that my banny isn't a Christian......If not,this our relationship for no pass first half undecided
grin grin grin
Re: Inside The Nigerian 'Miracle' Fertility Scam In Anambra State by BarrElChapo(m): 12:39pm On Nov 25, 2024
I just watched this documentary some hours ago, honestly I can’t believe that these women who opt for “cryptic pregnancy” are victims.

Furthermore, that child out to be taken away from that family interviewed by the commissioner in Anambra state. That her cock and bull story doesn’t make it right to keep a child gotten off human trafficking
Re: Inside The Nigerian 'Miracle' Fertility Scam In Anambra State by Dididrumz(m): 12:39pm On Nov 25, 2024
Re: Inside The Nigerian 'Miracle' Fertility Scam In Anambra State by Wickedtruths: 12:40pm On Nov 25, 2024
Thanks to this administration in Anambra for trying to clamp down on this nefarious practice.
Re: Inside The Nigerian 'Miracle' Fertility Scam In Anambra State by Olamideayomide(m): 12:41pm On Nov 25, 2024
Toor
Inside life ten is happening angry angry
Re: Inside The Nigerian 'Miracle' Fertility Scam In Anambra State by Zico5(m): 12:41pm On Nov 25, 2024
Why are these people like this for God sake. So life mean nothing to them so far it involves money. They forget this life is vanity. The death of Ifeanyi Ubah at 53 supposed to make them come to reality that money is not everything. How would I get rich at the expense of someone's life and happiness and live joyfully thereafter. Later they will come here to sing they are the most hard working and enterprising. Hard working my foot.
Re: Inside The Nigerian 'Miracle' Fertility Scam In Anambra State by Dpaulie(m): 12:41pm On Nov 25, 2024
Miracle baby
Re: Inside The Nigerian 'Miracle' Fertility Scam In Anambra State by Talkisneeded(m): 12:41pm On Nov 25, 2024
Miracle babies:not heard of 15 months pregnancy before, one in many may be considered as an anomaly, but when all of carries pregnancy for 15 month,then it's pure foolishness and outrageous scam
Re: Inside The Nigerian 'Miracle' Fertility Scam In Anambra State by Erimmy2(m): 12:42pm On Nov 25, 2024
Pls can anyone give me a mortgage bank agent's number?
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