Horrific Stories Of Nigerian Women Struggling To Rebuild Their Lives & Raise Their Kids Born Of Libya Rape
Thousands of Nigerian women trying to reach Italy, according to confirmed sources, are raped, tortured and kept as slaves in detention centres across Libya, one of the gateways for African migrants who try to reach Europe.
Some of these women narrated their sad experiences with AFP and how they struggle to raise their kids born of rape.
Joy was only just 18 when she gave birth without a doctor in a Tripoli apartment, gripping the hand of her best friend who had come on a journey they hoped would lead from Nigeria to Europe.
For Joy, those dreams of a new life on another continent had come to a halt. Her daughter was the child of her Libyan captor — a guard at a detention camp for illegal migrants where she had first been held after being picked up by authorities in the conflict-ravaged country.
Joy’s captor had asked her to move to his flat, and she was not in a position to be able to say ‘no’. Once there, she said that she was trapped inside for a year and turned into his slave.
When she became pregnant, he had attempted to force her out and tried everything to send her finally on the perilous journey by boat across the Mediterranean. After a series of failed attempts to make her leave, he threatened to kill her and the child. Joy, now aged 19, recalled:
“They say we are black and we are not Muslims so it’s a forbidden thing to have a child from them.”
The young mom eventually managed to escape and to hide with a friend. She had never been to see an obstetrician and feared if she went to a hospital her baby would be taken from her. She added:
“I heard too many things like that. There (in Libya) they can beat you up, abuse you, rape you, they can even kill you, they don’t care.”
SEE ALSO: Nigerian Female Migrant Raped and Tortured by Traffickers in Libya
Joy returned to her homeland of Nigeria in February last year thanks to a voluntary programme organised by the International Organization for Migration (IOM).
She is one of more than 14,000 Nigerians who have flown back on chartered planes from Libya under the scheme since 2017. About 35 percent of those who have returned are women. But the United Nations does not give a figure for the number of children “for their own protection”.
The IOM estimates that there remain more than 60,000 Nigerians in Libya among roughly 600,000 migrants from 39 nations, most of them with no legal documents, held in camps, prisons, private houses or brothels.
Joy now lives at Betsy Angels Shelter, a reintegration and training centre in Benin City in Nigeria’s southern Edo State, a hub for human trafficking to Europe, and her one-and-a-half-year old daughter is in daycare. Her lighter skin makes her stand out from the other children.
“I tell people that her dad is a white man,” Joy says, as if she, somehow, managed to live a bit of the new life she longed for in Europe.
‘Arabo children’
Migrants and the aid workers in Nigeria helping them say that most children born in Libya and brought back to Nigeria by their mothers have African, not Libyan, fathers.
They speak of the babies more often being born as the result of rape by traffickers, who transport the migrants through the deserts, or from coerced sex with sub-Saharan African customers in Libyan brothels, where women are often sold and locked up.
Whatever their origins, in Nigeria these children born in Libya are nicknamed “Arabo children” — stigmatised for the circumstances of their birth. Jennifer Ero, national coordinator for Nigeria’s Child Protection Network, said:
“Some will say ‘those Arabo children, we don’t want them in our house’.”
When the women leave on the journey to Europe, families expect them to end up sending back money to help relatives at home. But the reality can be very different. Ero said:
“Now they come back, they didn’t reach Europe, they come with debts, and with baggage — with a child with no name.”
SEE ALSO: ‘My father’s sexual demands drove me out of Nigeria’– Libya Returnee Shares Her Harrowing Experience
The protection centre that Ero runs in Benin City also provides psychological support for the women. The carer says that most of the mothers being looked after confide that they thought of aborting, if only they’d had access to the necessary medical help.
Some can be aggressive with their babies, she adds.
‘There is hope’
Tiny Justice is small for a toddler of his age. But at 18 months, he already carefully investigates the bedroom where he stays and immediately toddles over to hug his mother when he sees her cry.
Faith, who also asked for her name to be changed, was 19 when she became pregnant in what she calls the “ghetto” — a cluster of buildings in Gatrone in Libya’s southwestern desert where migrants are held.
Faith’s smugglers sold her and 10 other people to another gang of traffickers. Three years on, she is the only one to have returned to Nigeria. One remains trapped in Libya. She told AFP:
“The rest of us… all of them are gone. Only the two of us survived.”
Faith said the traffickers, who came from a number of different countries, brutally ruled over their prisoners’ lives as they demanded ransoms to release them. She recounted:
“We are kept captives, the men they torture them, they hang them on a cross like Jesus, they burn them. The girls, if we don’t sleep with them, they wouldn’t give us food. They tell us that if we don’t sleep with them, they will sell us. They sleep with us all the time. This is how I got pregnant.”
Since returning to Nigeria she has not been able to find work and is struggling to rebuild her life. But as she talks, the young mom caresses her son’s head — and this gives her strength. She added:
“As long as my baby and me are alive, there is hope. Because of what we’ve been through together, I love my baby very, very much.”
Photo credit: AFP