Public Agenda NewsPaperPublic Agenda NewsPaper
  • General News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Health
  • Development Agenda
  • World News
  • Features & Opinions
  • Election watch
  • Editorial
Font ResizerAa
Public Agenda NewsPaperPublic Agenda NewsPaper
Font ResizerAa
  • General News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Health
  • Development Agenda
  • World News
  • Features & Opinions
  • Election watch
  • Editorial
Search
  • General News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Health
  • Development Agenda
  • World News
  • Features & Opinions
  • Election watch
  • Editorial
Follow US
Breaking NewsDevelopment Agendatop stories

Nigerian women in Ghana exploited by smugglers, madams, ‘priests’

Latifa Carlos
Last updated: August 31, 2019 3:06 pm
Latifa Carlos
Share
9 Min Read
SHARE

Kumasi, Ghana – Jennifer* has spent the last few weeks on the pavements of Vienna City, a hub in Kumasi, Ghana’s second-largest city, [Ahodwo roundabout to Golden Tulip junction] which has a bustling nightlife.

She arrived in Ghana in May, having left a crowded hostel room in Lagos, Nigeria, hoping to secure work in sales or as a waitress and send her income to her mother in central Nigeria’s Ondo State.

But after a one-day bus trip from Lagos to Accra, her dreams crumbled as she reached the green hills of Kumasi.

More Read

I’ll hold you to the June 2026 deadline – Mahama to Ofankor–Nsawam road contractor
Draft report on review of Constitution to be ready by October – CRC
GRNMA apologises to Health Minister over attacks
Shadows of Empire: The CIA, Kwame Nkrumah, and the Struggle for Ghanaian Sovereignty
Empowering Rural Women through environmental justice: GAGGA grantees convene in Accra

“Please, get me out of here, this life is devastating,” she said.

“They put me immediately on the street, forcing me to prostitute from 8pm till morning, every day,” she said in a bar on Harper Road, where Rihanna’s songs crackled through an old sound system as other Nigerian women outside dressed in revealing clothes waited for clients.

“Each night, I receive up to eight clients, and end up having $20 to $25 in my hands,” she said.

Most of her money goes back into the “system” – to a “madam”, a Nigerian woman, and middlemen such as hotel managers.

Women and girls like Jennifer, with some as young as 14, are victims of a trafficking network that benefits several people from Nigeria to Ghana.

The old district of Dichemso, the heart of the business, lies on the opposite side of Kumasi’s city centre.

“Dichemso is where Kumasi’s sex industry is flourishing, thanks to different guesthouses and hotels, such as the Plaza,” said Bright Owusu, an independent researcher who has spent the last three years meeting Nigerian women forced into prostitution in the city.

Twenty Nigerian women live at one of these guesthouses, which is controlled by a few men at the entrance.

Locked in her room, 26-year-old Blessing* shared her experience.

“I am the oldest of five sisters and brothers: when our parents died, I knew I had to take care of them,” she said.

Local middlemen convinced her to leave Lokoja, in central Nigeria, to Ghana.

In Kumasi, “they introduced me to a woman, who brought me to a fetish priest and told me I owed her 8,000 cedis [about $1,500] for my transportation: I had to prostitute to pay that sum back”.

In some African countries, a “fetish priest” serves as a mediator between the spirit and the living.

Blessing refused, and ran away.

Soon after, she received death threats in messages to her phone. “The madam said the priest would throw a curse against me, but I didn’t want any debt,” she said.

After working for four months at a local market, for barely $30 a month, Blessing ultimately turned to prostitution as the only way to pay college fees for her younger sisters.

“I don’t like it here, but I have to resist,” she said.

In one year in Dichemso, she said she has met dozens of women with similar experiences.

“Every day, Nigerian girls enter Ghana, undergo voodoo rituals and are put into prostitution, and nobody seems to care,” she said.

“Through rituals, madams make sure that you’ll pay back a debt,” said Blessing.

Debts vary between $1,000 and $2,000, while prices “are as low as 5 cedis [$1] for a short [sexual encounter] – less than 10 minutes with the client – and up to 30 cedis for half an hour or more”, she added.

Owusu, the researcher, explained: “Some of these women know they’ll be coming for prostitution, but they don’t know that once here, they’ll lose control over their life.”

Voodoo rituals play a central role.

“They are the most powerful bond, one that has a strong psychological impact,” he said.

Victoria Klimova, a project coordinator at the International Organization for Migration (IOM) in Ghana, said that national authorities do not have complete information on sex trafficking.

However, according to Al Jazeera’s interviews and research, it is estimated that there are at least hundreds of Nigerian women working as prostitutes in Ghana.

Late last year, IOM launched a programme aimed at creating comprehensive data on sex trafficking and labour exploitation in Ghana, and to support the government’s 2017 strategy to combat the problem.

According to the US Department of State, a trafficking investigation which opened last year has seen just three people convicted.

Out of 49 women identified as potential victims of sex trafficking, 46 were Nigerian, and 22 were underage.

The Ghana Immigration Service (GIS), a state agency, in part supported this investigation.

Alberta Ampofo leads its anti-smuggling operation, which is propped up with European Union funds.

She said some “rescued women” are living at Ghana’s first shelter for trafficking victims, which opened in February.

“They should cooperate in investigations, before being returned to their families,” she said.

“Victims of sex trafficking are in all corners of Ghana and much has yet to be done, but there’s more awareness among the population and authorities, and that’s a good start.”

But Ampofo said that GIS is not prosecuting fetish priests.

“How can a priest know that a Nigerian lady is a victim of trafficking, if the madam simply presents her as an employee?”

However, this is not the case of Nana Badu, a renowned prophetess in Kumasi.

In a small room in her house, there are wooden statues of oracles, bowls and bottles.

Her oracles, she said, “can give strength, bring children, make business flourish or protect from enemies”.

She added that madams “come for protection so that the police won’t stop their girls at the border, since I have a medicine that prevents police from seeing you”.

To “help” trafficked women pay back their debts, she claimed that she is able to foster “bonds” between sex workers and employers.

“If a woman tries to escape, the oracle will put the police on her back, to arrest her,” said Badu.

Finally, when the debt is repaid, the madam returns with the sex worker and Badu reverses a ritual to release the victim.

None of the five women Al Jazeera interviewed in Kumasi, who hailed from different Nigerian states, was aware of a 2018 edict that dissolved all these oaths, led by the influential Oba, or traditional chief, of Benin City – one of the main origins of Nigerian women trafficked to Europe.

“Traditional priests feel they are somehow untouchable here, even by authorities,” said Owusu.

Still, their services appear to play a key role in a system that exposes Nigerian women in Ghana to daily risks, as tragically confirmed in May with the murder of a 25-year-old woman known as Nina.

“I remember her receiving a call from a client and smiling,” said Blessing, who knew Nina well.

Days later, the woman’s body was found outside of Kumasi. Two men were arrested for the murder.

“We collected money for the burial and called her parents back in Nigeria,” said Blessing. “They had no idea of what their daughter was going through here.”

Names marked with an asterisk* have been changed to protect interviewees’ identities.

 

Source: aljazeera.com

Share This Article
Facebook Whatsapp Whatsapp Email Copy Link Print

Latest News

Birim North District Unveils Medium -Term Development Plan and More…
September 2, 2025
Chief Justice Getrude Torkornoo removed
September 1, 2025
ABANTU Engages Unsuccessful Women Parliamentary Candidates to Strengthen Political Participation in Ghana
August 28, 2025
Pakistan unveils 7-point plan for Gaza peace at OIC summit
August 26, 2025
Bagre Dam Spillage claims life of farmer
August 26, 2025
Ghana and Nigeria explore electricity for gas barter agreement
August 26, 2025
Ghana drops to 61st in 2025 Global Peace Index
August 26, 2025

You Might Also Like

Breaking NewsDevelopment AgendaElection watch

Charles Abugre Chairs MiDA Board

August 22, 2025
Breaking NewsBusinesstop stories

Ghana cedi is world’s best-performing currency – Mahama tells investors in Japan

August 20, 2025
Breaking NewsBusinesstop stories

PAC Faults Communications Ministry Over Missing $6m

August 20, 2025
Breaking NewsPan Africa Politicstop stories

Burkina Faso’s junta expels top UN official over child rights report

August 19, 2025

About Us

Public Agenda is fou­nded and owned by Pu­blic Agenda Communic­ations.

Public Agenda was founded as a public interest Me­dia entity. Its Visi­on is to contribute to building a well-i­nformed society where accurate informati­on dissemination is the cornerstone of a democratic, just and equitable society.

Its mission is to inform, guide and bui­ld responsible citiz­enship and accountab­le decision making and strive for excell­ence in the media in­dustry. Public Agenda Communications is managed by a Board of Directors.

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?