The state Comptroller, Mrs. Funke Adeuyi, told newsmen in Calabar that the suspects were apprehended by men of the NIS on border patrol at Itigidi in Abi Local Government Area of the state.
According to her, “On January 10, the immigration border patrol officers at Itigidi intercepted two buses carrying 29 youths which we found out to be victims of human trafficking.
“On first line interrogation, we discover that a lot of them were going to an unknown destination. We have profiled them, and we have cause to suspect that they were about to be trafficked to an unknown destination.
“The suspects had some money with them during the arrest, while some of the victims had cell
phones with them and the victims told us during our first line investigation that they were being taken to a place where they would work and get some money.
“We reliably gathered from some of the victims that their parents were aware that the suspected traffickers were taking them away to do menial jobs that would earn them money.
“The better information on where they intend to traffic them to would be better unraveled when we hand them over to the National Agency for the Prohibition of Traffic in Persons, NAPTIP, for further investigation on the matter,” Adeuyi said.
She advised parents to be careful in giving out their children or wards to people who they do not know much about.
An official from NAPTIP, Mr. Victor Odudukudu, who received the victims and suspected traffickers, assured that the agency would continue with the investigation.
“We are going to interview the victims and interrogate the suspects.
“We are also going to trace their family members and find out if they actually gave out their children to the suspects,’’ he said.
One of the suspects, Dennis Agbor, said he took the victims from Yakurr Local Government Area of Cross River to Akure, Ondo State to work in his restaurant.
“I am not taking them for anything bad; I was only trying to help them earn a living and I even know some of their parents.
“When I was about going back to my base in Akure, these people met me and appealed that I take them along with me and engage them in menial jobs, so I agreed to their appeal and promised that I will be paying those that will work in my restaurant some token while I will engage others elsewhere,” Agbor said.
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