“Born Behind Bars: Nigeria’s Forgotten Daughters in Libya’s Prisons”

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Nigeria's senate
Nigeria's senate

In a moment of raw outrage, the Nigerian Senate has sounded the alarm over the horrific abuse of Nigerian women and children languishing in Libyan prisons — victims of trafficking, torture, and a global system that has failed them.

Senator Aniekan Bassey called Libya a “corridor of death and despair,” exposing how traffickers lure desperate Nigerians with false promises of jobs, only to sell them into sexual slavery and forced labor. Many end up imprisoned — not as criminals, but as survivors of unspeakable violence.

Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan painted a chilling picture:
“These women were victims twice over — first of traffickers, then of a broken system. Several were raped in detention, forced into pregnancy, and now their children are growing up behind bars.”

Let that sink in: Nigerian children born in prison cells, punished for crimes they never committed.

The Senate’s resolution demands:

  • Immediate diplomatic intervention
  • Collaboration with Libyan authorities
  • Repatriation of all Nigerian female inmates and their children

Why this matters:

  • Over 1,000 Nigerians were repatriated from Libya in early 2025, many with stories of blood harvesting, sexual violence, and torture.
  • One survivor, Mercy Olugbenga, sold her family’s property to escape poverty — only to be held captive and drained of her blood for over a year.

This isn’t just a humanitarian crisis. It’s a national shame.
And it raises uncomfortable questions:

  • Why are traffickers still operating with impunity?
  • Why has the global community turned a blind eye to African suffering?
  • How many more Mercys must bleed before we act?

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