A Nigerian woman has made a passionate appeal to the Nigerian government to come to her rescue in Oman where she is being presently held in captivity.
Najeeb Rukoyat
Kemi, 28, from Ikire town in Osun State left for Oman in November 2016, to
search for greener pasture after being talked into the deal by a close friend.
However, upon
arriving in the country her host seized her international passports and other
vital documents then made her a housemaid.
Narrating her
ordeal during an exclusive telephone chat with the President of Journalists
International Forum For Migration (JIFORM), Ajibola Abayomi, the woman said
within the last four years she has been resold four times to different masters
where she worked as a housemaid on monthly stipends that was never paid in most
cases.
She claimed
that she was traded off to her present master some months ago for 800 rials
(N700, 000).
Her current
master placed on a monthly salary of N70,000 per month, however, she says she
has been subjected to serious sexual harassment.
"At the
current house I am now working, the man wants to sleep with me but I have been
refusing him so he told me to go back to the office that brought me to him. I
am being starved of food and kept indoor without being allowed to go out.
"I can
no longer cope with this job so please I want to go back home. Kindly assist
me. I have an Ordinary National Diploma from Offa Polytechnic; there are better
opportunities in Nigeria. I am tired, all the money I have been getting I used
to send it home to assist my younger ones" Kemi lamented.
Reacting to
the plight of the lady, the Director General of the National Agency for the
Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP), Julie Okah – Donli said she was
deeply concerned and shared the pain and agony of the said victim through an
interview granted by the agency’s Press Officer, Mr Adekoye Vincent.
He said:
"In line with its determination to continue to respond to the plight of
victims, the agency solicits for information that will enable it to work with
international and local partners with a view to rescuing her and ensuring her
safe return to Nigeria."
The JIFORM
president said all the other vital information about the victim would be
forwarded to NAPTIP for further action.
"We
won’t be tired of doing this all the time. Recall that between July and
September this year JIFORM was instrumental to the call for the rescue of 138
Nigerian ladies trafficked to Saudi Arabia and additional 435 women also
trapped in Yemen, Oman, Lebanon and other Arab nations. We shall provide her
details as well as other ladies to the NAPTIP and follow up on the rescue
mission ditto for the prosecution of the trafficking agency involved"
Ajibola pledged.

No comments:
Post a Comment