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| One of the Nigerian defendants in a Lyon courtroom on Wednesday ahead of the opening of a trial into alleged human trafficking and pimping of migrants in France. (AFP Photo/ROMAIN LAFABREGUE) |
Lyon (AFP) - Twenty-four alleged members of a trafficking ring accused of forcing Nigerian women into prostitution in France went on trial Wednesday, in the latest case to highlight the increasing use of migrants as sex slaves in Europe.
Only one of
the 17 alleged victims was present for the first appearance of the accused in
the court in the southeastern city of Lyon -- 10 women and 14 men, all but one
Nigerian.
They risk
10 years' imprisonment on charges including human trafficking, pimping, money
laundering and helping people live illegally in France.
Nigeria was
the main country of origin for the tens of thousands of migrants who arrived in
Italy by boat in 2016 and 2017.
Many were
women and girls lured to Europe with false promises of jobs as hairdressers or
seamstresses, only to find themselves selling sex to repay their smugglers.
Nigerians
outnumber Chinese or Eastern European sex workers on the streets of France and
some other European countries.
Last year,
15 members of a Paris-based, female-led pimping ring known as the
"Authentic Sisters" -- many themselves former trafficking victims --
were jailed for up to 11 years for forcing girls into slavery in France.
Similar
gangs have been dismantled in Italy and Britain.
The
investigation in Lyon, where police estimate half the city's sex workers are
Nigerian, began after authorities received a tip-off about a Nigerian pastor
accused of exploiting sex workers who lived in apartments he owned.
Months of
police wiretaps and surveillance of the pastor, Stanley Omoregie, and others
led to the arrest of the suspects between September 2017 and January 2018.
Omoregie,
35, denied any wrongdoing, telling the court that he "wanted to help
people" and that while he lodged the women in exchange for rent, he knew
nothing of their activities.
"May
God strike me down right now if any girl worked for me," he said.
"I've always been against pimping."
But in
wiretaps, when Omoregie is heard asking a woman identified as Bella where she
is, she answers "at work."
"With
Blessing?" he then asks, referring to another woman. "You're not in
the same place?"
In another
call read to the court, Omoregie asks if a woman is using the heater in her
truck -- something she would have to pay extra for.
Omoregie
told the court investigators had mistranslated the transcriptions of his calls.
- From
prostitution to pimping -
The
prosecution has presented the pastor as the kingpin of a family-based syndicate
that includes one of Europe's most wanted women, Jessica Edosomwan, accused of
recruiting destitute women in Nigeria for the sex trade in Lyon, Nimes and
Montpellier in France.
Edosomwan,
who is believed to be on the run in Europe, will be tried in her absence.
The UN
estimates that 80 percent of young Nigerian women arriving in Italy -- usually
their first port of call in Europe -- are already in the clutches of
prostitution networks, or quickly fall under their control.
The accused
in Lyon allegedly covered the entire gamut of sex trafficking activities, from
iron-fisted "madams" and violent pimps to the drivers of vans in
which the women performed sex acts, and those who laundered the proceeds.
Prosecutors
estimate the victims, aged 17 to 38, made up to 150,000 euros ($166,000) a
month for the syndicate by selling sex for as little as 10 euros.
Most of the
women come from Benin City, capital of Nigeria's southern Edo State, a human
trafficking hotbed.
Many told
investigators they had taken part in "juju" or black magic rituals
before leaving Nigeria, during which they had to promise to repay the money for
their passage to Europe.
The trip
often started with a perilous trek across the Sahara Desert to Libya, then
across the Mediterranean to Italy, and finally to Lyon.
The
victims' lawyers told the court Wednesday the women were absent because they
feared coming under pressure from the accused or their representatives at
court.
Unusually,
one of the 17 victims in the case is also among the accused: a 28-year-old
former prostitute who was released from sex slavery after paying off her debts
only to then bring another young woman from Nigeria.
She was the
only victim present.

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