Italian police arrest alleged Black Axe Nigerian mafia members over trafficking
Four alleged members of the Nigerian mafia have been
arrested in southern Italy after a young sex trafficking survivor spoke out
against them.
The men, who were arrested in Palermo and Taranto in the
early hours of Tuesday, allegedly belong to the feared Black Axe, a cult-like criminal
gang that emerged in the 1970s at the University of Benin, according to police.
Investigators in Palermo who led the operation said the
woman, who is also Nigerian, was forced into prostitution after taking part in
an occult ritual bound up with traditional spiritual beliefs, known as juju,
which bond victims to their traffickers and to any debts they will incur.
“The suspects were charged with slavery, human trafficking,
kidnapping and pandering [recruiting prostitutes],” the police said.
The woman, whom investigators said was convinced by a
Pentecostal cleric to report her captors to police, had been imprisoned, raped,
blackmailed and forced into prostitution to pay a debt of about €15,000
(£12,500).
Before she left Nigeria, like many other victims of sex
trafficking, the woman had been made to undergo a traditional oath-taking ceremony
involving complicated and frightening rituals often using the women’s blood,
hair and clothing. Those carrying out the ritual, which has been found to have
a profound psychological impact on victims, make it clear that failure to pay
off those debts will result in terrible things happening to the woman and her
family.
The abuse of religious and cultural belief systems in
Nigeria has proved a deadly and highly effective control mechanism for
traffickers recruiting women destined for the sex trade in Europe. A hugely
profitable and well-organised criminal industry has been operating between
Italy and Nigeria for more than two decades but the UN’s International
Organization for Migration says it has seen a rise in the number of potential
sex-trafficking victims arriving in Italy by sea in the past few years, lured
by the promise of work in the country.
According to a Save the Children report last year Italy had
2,040 victims of sex trafficking – 716 of whom were registered in 2020 – with
the majority of them Nigerian.
Father Enzo Volpe, a priest in Palermo who has been helping
Nigerian women for nine years, told the Guardian: “These women are terrified of
the threats and the violence perpetrated by their captors. They fear not only
for their lives but also for those of their families back in Nigeria.”
“The problem,” said Volpe, “is that behind the slavery of
these women there is a real mafia with members operating across the continent,
who have total control over their victims.”
Last year, Italian police arrested 30 people suspected of
belonging to the Nigerian Black Axe mafia, which has been operating in many
regions of the country, among them its suspected 35-year-old leader in Italy.
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