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Wednesday, April 24, 2024 | Back issues
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Nigerian Police Free Women From ‘Baby Factory’

Nigerian police have rescued 13 people, including a child and six pregnant women, from an illegal “baby factory” in southwestern Ogun state, a spokesman said Friday.

LAGOS, Nigeria (AFP) — Nigerian police have rescued 13 people, including a child and six pregnant women, from an illegal “baby factory” in southwestern Ogun state, a spokesman said Friday.

The women, from 20 to 25 years old, told police the owner hired men to impregnate them and then sell the newborns for profit in what has been dubbed a "baby factory."

The "factories" are usually small illegal facilities parading as private medical clinics that house pregnant women and offer their babies for sale.

In some cases, young women have been held against their will and raped before their babies are sold on the black market.

"The operation was carried out on Feb. 28 after an inmate of the home located around Mowe escaped and tipped off the police," police spokesman Abimbola Oyeyemi said.

"We also arrested the owner of the home and two men who are suspected of being hired to impregnate the women."

Oyeyemi said the women told police that the home's owner hired men to sleep with them to make babies.

"They told us that the babies would then be taken from them and sold to patrons," he said.

"The suspects are in custody and they will be charged to court at the end of our investigation."

Police raids on illegal maternity units have been relatively common in Nigeria, especially in the south.

Security services say other cases have seen women with unplanned pregnancies pressured into giving birth in the facilities.

Baby boys are typically sold for 500,000 naira ($1,400) while girls fetch 300,000 naira, police have said in previous cases.

Last week 24 babies and four pregnant mothers were rescued in the southern city of Port Harcourt.

© Agence France-Presse

Categories / Civil Rights, Criminal, International

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