Naples mafiosi were convicted this week of forcing a Nigerian cancer patient into prostitution.
Barbie Latza Nadeau on the African girls trapped in Italy’s sex-slave trade.
The Domitiana highway was built in 95 A.D. as a thoroughfare, leading north up the boot of Italy from the bay of Naples.
Now
it is something like a one-stop sex supermarket where up to 600
Nigerian prostitutes can be found at a time along a 30-kilometer stretch
of the pot-holed road.
Across Italy, Nigerian women are forced
into the sex trade, essentially kept as slaves who are bought and sold
and moved according to a moribund supply and demand.
Some of the
prostitutes are young girls, just 13 or 14 years old. Others are in
their 20s or 30s. Many have children. Some are still married to men in
Nigeria.
They usually sit on white plastic chairs under umbrellas
to protect them from the rain in the winter and the harsh sun in the
summer.
The highest concentration of Nigerian forced sex workers
is in and around Naples, but they are not limited to the southern
reaches.
On Thursday, in the central region of Abruzzo, four
Nigerian gang members and an Italian taxi driver who allegedly procured
prostitutes across the country were sentenced to between nine and 15
years in prison for making 23-year-old Nigerian Lilian Solomon
prostitute herself even though she was in the late stages of lymphoma
cancer.
The court in Teramo ruled that the Nigerian band
prohibited the young woman from seeking treatment and should be held
responsible for her death.
She was represented in court by members
of "On the Road" association against sex trafficking, which alerted
authorities about her plight.
Solomon testified under oath against
the band before she died in 2009. The sentence, four years after her
death, won’t bring her back, but it is one small step toward holding the
sex traffickers accountable.
According to Renato Natale, a local
Neapolitan doctor who is a former anti-mafia mayor of Casal di Principe,
the majority of the Nigerian girls and women who are sex slaves were
sold for around $50,000 by their parents or husbands in Nigeria, often
to pay loan sharks or to get families out of debt.
Some women paid
sums of more than $13,000 out of their own pockets in exchange for the
promise to find legitimate work in Italy with the goal of sending money
home or even eventually bringing their entire families over.
Natale says when they arrive in Italy, they are often raped into submission and plied with drugs and turned into prostitutes.
Many
of the women have scars on their bodies from a voodoo-style initiation
ritual where they pledge allegiance to their pimps out of fear of
torture.
"Frida", 26, is a former prostitute who now works at a
shelter for abused women in Rome. She says her initiation included
vaginal penetration with a hot candle.
She has scars on her inner
thighs from the hot wax. She worked on the Via Domitiana for three years
before she ran away with one of her clients who she befriended.
She
said many of the women on the Neapolitan highway try to convince the
clients to take them away, but they often get caught and the men are
threatened never to return.
"Even the police sometimes pay for sex," she said. "There is no protection there from anyone. There is no one you can trust."
She
says she was required to pay the Nigerian mafia dons $400 a month for
one-square-meter of highway to work off the $50,000 investment.
Natale
says the Nigerians, in turn, pay a fee to the Casalesi clan of the
Camorra organized-crime syndicate, who run the sex trade around Naples.
Natale
says the women are not allowed to charge more than $13 a trick—the
market rate for street sex in the impoverished south—and they are not
allowed to refuse customers.
Frida says they were afraid to charge
more. "They watched us all the time," she says. "They would drive by or
send spies to make sure we stayed in line."
Prostitution is not
illegal in Italy as long as the sex workers are over 18, but it is
illegal to pick up a prostitute on the street.
Recently, police
have been enforcing the client crackdown on roadside prostitution by
fining the clients, so the mob has started buying up apartment blocks
along the Via Domitiana and in other parts of the country.
They
have started moving the women off the streets and into the villas where
drugs are sold in the basement and sex is sold upstairs. Natale used to
visit the women on the streets and give them medications for STDs.
He
says the move to put the women in the houses is far more dangerous and
life-threatening. "These people are treated like merchandise," he says.
"Now
they are being kept in these houses that are protected by armed guards.
They were somewhat safer on the streets because at least there we could
check on them."
There is little hope to stop the illegal
sex-trafficking racket, says Natale, because most of the women are
illegal immigrants and do not have documents and are not in the Italian
state system and therefore "nonexistent" in the eyes of the authorities.
But
there is also a bigger problem in that there is no authoritative
government entity currently involved in stopping sex trafficking in
Italy.
All the work is done by non-governmental organizations with
limited funds and virtually no power. "We are like ghosts," says Frida,
who recently legalized her living status in Italy and wants to help
other Nigerians get off the street. "We are literally shadows on the
highway."
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