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October 03, 2005
Nigerian drug mules 'on the rise'
Drug runners may be targeting Nigerian women as "mules" after a UK government clampdown in Jamaica, warn campaigners.
By Christine Jeavans
BBC News
The number of Nigerian women on drugs charges in UK jails has risen almost sixfold in three years, figures supplied to the BBC News website show.
On 30 June this year, 85 of the 151 Nigerian women in custody in the UK were being held for drugs offences. In 2002 there were just 15 out of 29.
The Home Office data also shows a rise among women from Trinidad and Tobago.
Foreign women make up 18% of the female prison population and about 60% of them are held on drugs offences.
These include swallowing or "stuffing" packages of cocaine, and carrying drugs in luggage or concealed in clothing.
The apparent shift to Nigeria comes two years after an outcry over the number of Jamaican female drugs mules in British jails, which climbed to more than 440 in 2002.
That number has now fallen to 136 following changes to policy regarding the early release of foreign prisoners and Operation Airbridge, a joint UK and Jamaican scheme that saw people-scanners installed at airports in Jamaica.
The UK Foreign Office also backed an educational programme on the island, aimed at women who may be approached by drug traffickers.
Graph: How the numbers have changed
However Olga Heaven, director of the foreign prisoner support charity Hibiscus which led the educational programme in Jamaica, says drugs barons have probably simply moved their trade to elsewhere in the Caribbean and west Africa.
"I believe since the campaign started in Jamaica there has been a direct shift to Trinidad and also Nigeria - Nigeria even more so," she said.
"Guys who organise these people always try to stay one step ahead of the people who are deterring them so they will look and see what is going on and move accordingly."
HM Revenue and Customs said the number of Jamaicans trying to smuggle drugs to the UK by swallowing them had reduced by over 90% thanks to Operation Airbridge.
"We remain vigilant as the drugs organisers look for new ways to get round our operations," a spokeswoman said.
She added that Customs could not prove a link between the decline in Jamaica and the rise in Nigeria, but the successful operation in Jamaica had freed up resources to tackle the problem in "other risk areas such as west Africa".
'Mothers targeted'
Hibiscus is looking into doing educational work in Nigeria in 2006 and the charity is about to launch in Trinidad the same campaign it has been running in Jamaica.
Its centrepiece is a three-minute TV animation showing the cautionary tale of Eva - a Jamaican woman with young children who is duped and bribed into carrying drugs and then gets caught on arrival in Britain.
Unlike the teenage lead character in Maria Full of Grace, the recent film about drugs mules, the women who Olga Heaven sees tend to be single mothers in their 30s with several children depending on them.
"Women with children get caught up in a situation where they begin to borrow money for schooling, or for paying rent, and they are not employable because of lack of training.
"They don't have another way out of their situation, carrying drugs is their last resort."
12-year sentence
Denise Iwenofu*, a 31-year-old mother of two from Lagos, admits that she smuggled drugs for financial gain but says she did not realise at first what she was getting into.
"I don't want my children to be like me because I didn't go to school and in my country if you don't go to school it is not easy to get a job," she said.
"[Some men] said to me they would give me £2,000 to send my kids to school. They said I would be sponsored to London and I would get a job there and send the money back."
But when she followed up the offer, she was taken to a hotel and told she would be paid according to how many cocaine packages she swallowed.
The man said that when she arrived in London she would be met by another man who would give her a laxative, retrieve the drugs and pay her.
"He said if I tell anybody I would be killed. I had to do a vow to him that I would not tell anybody," she said.
Caught on arrival into the country, Denise was sentenced to six years of which she has served 16 months so far.
But some women like Elizabeth Oshodi,* 41, also from Lagos are serving much longer sentences. She was sentenced to 12-years after customs officials found 4kg of cocaine in her baggage when she landed in Britain.
Elizabeth says she was deeply in debt after the death of her husband and her mother, whose breast cancer had required years of hospital fees.
She accepted an offer of work in the UK from one of her creditors, in order to repay him, and was given two cases of hair-pieces and extensions to bring into the country.
She says she did not know that one of the boxes also contained drugs as she had not packed them herself.
Elizabeth has not told her children the length of her sentence. "I just tell my son I hope to see him soon," she says.
Poverty
Alice Ukoko, director of campaign group Women of Nigeria International warns there will be more and more women like these in British jails if poverty in Nigeria remains unaddressed.
"All this is happening because there is a low level of awareness, economic hardship and hopelessness on the ground," she said.
"Nigerians have reached a situation where we don't know what law and order means. You just do things that you think will bring you money, whether it's in the law or not.
She added: "England is like heaven so people want to come to England. When you tell them people are suffering over here they say 'How can it be? Nigeria is the place where people suffer.'"
*Names of the prisoners have been changed for this article.
Posted by Publisher at October 3, 2005 03:06 PM
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