Jack Splitters in Kenya

We have made important changes to our privacy policy and cookies and would like to inform you what this means for you and your personal information. $ 400 baby. How children are sold and bought in Kenya, including for sacrifices Peter Murimi, Joel Gunter and Tom Watson "You mustn't let your guard down. The rich will steal your baby while you sleep," says Rebecca The illegal trade in kidnapped children is rampant in Kenya. Employees of the BBC Africa Eye program managed to infiltrate criminal groups involved in the sale of babies. You can buy a child there for about $ 400. Rebecca's son is 10 years old. But that's all she now knows about him. Maybe he lives like her in Nairobi. Or somewhere else. But deep down, she suspects that her son may no longer be alive. The last time she saw her first child, Lawrence Josiah, was when he was only a year old and she was 16. It happened in March 2011, at two o'clock in the morning. Rebecca dozed off after sniffing a handkerchief dipped in aviation fuel, which is sold on the streets of Nairobi as a Jack Splitters in Kenya  cheap drug. She needed to pluck up the courage to start begging for money from passers-by. Rebecca was only 15 years old when her mother could no longer support her or pay for school, and as a result, the girl ended up on the street. There she was noticed by an adult man who promised to marry her, but left her as soon as she became pregnant. Rebecca gave birth to Lawrence Josiah. She raised the boy for just over a year until that fateful night when she was overwhelmed by sleep. She never saw her son again. Rebecca's son was stolen at night. "I hope he comes back one day," she says. “I have other children,” says Rebecca, holding back tears, “but he was my first child, he made me a mother. I looked for him in all orphanages, I looked in Kiamba (a city in Kenya), I looked in Kaiola (a district of Nairobi) but never found it. " Rebecca still lives on the same streets of Nairobi. After her son disappeared, she gave birth to three more children. She now has girls aged eight, six and four. Once a stranger tried to steal her youngest daughter. Before that, he had been wandering around the surrounding streets for several days. In his defense, he stated that a one-year-old girl asked him to buy her some kind of drink. Then Rebecca followed him to the parking lot, where a woman was waiting for him. The next day he returned to the place of "hunting". Rebecca's story is far from unique, especially among the slum dwellers. Esther's three-year-old son disappeared in August 2018. "Since that day," she said, "I have not had a minute of peace. Wherever I have not looked for it! I went around all the orphanages up to Mombasa." Another mother, Carol, lost her two-year-old son five years ago, he was also kidnapped at night. "I loved him so much! I would forgive them if they returned my child!" She says. Child trafficking is flourishing in Nairobi. For a year, BBC Africa Eye reporters investigated a black market that buys and sells children abducted from homeless mothers at huge profits. The BBC also found evidence that the illegal business involved employees of street clinics for the poor and even employees of large public hospitals helping to fulfill the order for the kidnapping. To identify those who abuse their position, the BBC decided to "buy" a child left without parents. To do this, we contacted a hospital employee, who first completely legally transferred the custody of the baby to himself, and then directly sold it to us. The most diverse layers of the Kenyan underworld are involved in kidnapping children - from drug addicts trying by any means to get money for the next dose, to criminal gangs, and they often work in tandem. In the first group, there are many such characters as the alcoholic and drug addict Anita, who lives in the slums and steals children under three years old from mothers like Rebecca. https://jiji.co.ke/388-jack-splitters

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

kanombe house for sale

https://cars45.com.gh/rbQE4x1ROypRzFQSQ1cfTgDC

Projectors Rental in Nigeria