The two suspects were arrested on a warrant issued by Norway after a Nigerian woman lodged a complaint against them in Oslo.
Spanish police said the
pair promised their victims, who were living in extreme poverty, a job and that
they would cover their travel expenses. They would then force them to become
prostitutes.
The young Nigerian woman
who filed the complaint had herself been lured in 2011 to Spain by a woman who
promised her work.
When she arrived in
Spain, however, she was kidnapped and held in an apartment on the southern edge
of Madrid.
Her abductor then forced
her to work as a prostitute in several Spanish cities, as well as Bordeaux in
France and finally Oslo, claiming she was owed a 60,000-euro ($66,000) debt).
“The ‘madam’ and her
accomplices had control over her, using all methods of aggression and threats
and resorting to traditional Juju voodoo practices, including animal
sacrifices,” the police said.
In these rites, the
victims are forced to take a pledge of obedience, which they are then persuaded
into believing that they would fall ill or become insane if they fail to obey,
according to Amnesty International.
The two suspects were
arrested at their home with police finding false identity documents and several
objects linked to the rituals there.
Six Nigerians including
four women were convicted in France last month over similar charges.
Also in June, Spanish
police dismantled a trafficking ring that they said used voodoo rituals to
force women into prostitution.
-AFP
No comments:
Post a Comment