REVIEW OF A FILM-'IN A STRANGE LAND' WRITTEN & PRODUCED BY ROSALINE SANNI AJOSE WRITTEN BY DAUDA AWWAL (Investigative Journalist and Film Producer)
The London Premiere of A Film 'IN A STRANGE LAND' A Film about Modern Day Slavery. Despite the fact that Nigeria is a sovereign member of the United Nation and competent signatory to the war against child abuse, forced labour and human trafficking. It is absurd to note that millions of Nigerian children are subjected daily to UK in all forms of abuse ranging from trafficking to slavery and forced labour .Children were trafficked from Lagos, Kwara, Nassarawa ,Borno, Adamawa, Imo, Calaba, Kwara,Kano, Ekiti and some villages to be used as sex slave and child labourers within the motor parks, market ,restaurants or trafficked to Europe. Akwa Ibom is leading in human trafficking and child labour followed by Edo state. Young boys from Togo were recruited to work as agricultural workers in Nigeria in return for their school fees. Nigeria has more cases of trafficking of women to UK and European countries and middle East than any other African countries. As an investigative journalist with experience on this topic, my concern is that, most of antitrafficking programmes focus on trafficking for sex exploitation and child labour saying that campaigns are too narrow in scope. My findings reveals that 80 percent of forced labour in the African region is for economic exploitation and 8 percent for commercial. The phenomenon of human trafficking in Nigeria has become multi dimensional to the extent that anybody could fall a victim and no one is safe. Besides prostitution, marriage, and forced labour. While lots of people blame poverty or culture as a basis for human trafficking in Nigeria, NAPTIP officials told me other causes of the outrageous rate of human trafficking in Nigeria are ignorance, desperation, and the promotion and commercialization of sex by the European Union (EU). National Agency for Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP) made efforts to combat these ugly development. There are fears that large numbers of children have been trafficked into Britain and they are being used as domestic slaves The European Union has estimated that 60% of all sex workers in Italy and Belgium are Nigerian