Shortly after authorities demolished their homes, the angry prostitutes set the cattle market ablaze.
In an interview with Punch magazine, the leader of the prostitutes who identified herself as
Rachel said: We are decent people. We do our business and go our way. We don’t harbor criminals. After all, most of the people that visit us are government officials. They want me to expose them? They destroyed our center and left behind other huts, kiosks and canteens that belong to the Hausa cattle traders. Is that justice? Don’t those one harbor kidnappers and criminals? The prostitutes also said they would go on a four-day strike starting on Wednesday to protest the local government’s actions. “We want to tell them they are the people patronizing us,” Rachel told Punch.
Demolishing
the brothels was part of an overall effort to drive out crime from the
southern state, said the general manager of the Anambra State Urban
Development Board. The brothels were illegal buildings in Amansea that
have allegedly become safe havens for kidnappers and armed robbers, said
Nathan Enemuo, who led the operation at the cattle market. The
operation will extend to other urban areas within the Nigerian state,
where prostitutes run their businesses in illegal structures, according
to Enemuo.
Speaking to Vanguard, Enemuo said: A lot of prostitutes live around Amansea cattle market, spoiling our children and constituting nuisance in the area and you know that anywhere there is brothel, criminals and kidnappers hover around there. In my capacity as the Anambra State Urban Development Board general manager, I will ensure that this does not exist anymore in the state and our activities are in line with our amiable governor’s policy on zero tolerance to crime and kidnapping in the state.
No comments:
Post a Comment