Court sentences Nigerian who kidnapped girl, fed her drugs and kept her as a sex slave

Picture: Pixabay

Picture: Pixabay

Published Apr 29, 2021

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A Nigerian national who kidnapped a young girl, fed her drugs and forced her to have sex with up to six men a day over a three-month period has been sentenced in the Gauteng North High Court.

The National Prosecuting Authority said Augustine Omini Obono was charged with human trafficking, rape, statutory rape and sexual exploitation.

NPA spokesperson Lumka Mahanjana said Obono was also found guilty of kidnapping and keeping a brothel.

Mahanjana said in September 2016, the girl was at a park in Derdepoort for a picnic with her friends when she met a woman who asked her to accompany her to a flat in Sunnyside, Pretoria, where she would meet a man.

"The woman promised the minor that she would give her taxi money to go to Mamelodi the following morning.“

When they arrived at the flat in Sunnyside, the woman handed the minor over to Obono for purposes of sexual exploitation or for her to be used as a prostitute.

“Obono kept the minor in the flat for three months," Mahanjana said.

She said over the three-month period, Obono fed the girl drugs and forced her to have sex with between five to six men a day.

"In December 2016, the minor eventually managed to escape and went to her uncle’s place in Mamelodi.“

“When she arrived, she informed her uncle of what had happened. The uncle reported the matter to the police and the minor pointed out the flat where she was kept," she said.

When the police went into the flat, they found Obono and arrested him and he has been in custody since.

The court handed down three life imprisonment terms for human trafficking, rape, statutory rape and sexual exploitation. He was further sentenced to three years for kidnapping and seven years for keeping a brothel.

The National Prosecuting Authority sexual offences and community affairs unit referred the minor for counselling.

Last year, IOL reported that in SA, child trafficking had become a central concern for both state and non-state agencies.

SA is considered to be on the “Tier 2 Watchlist” for human trafficking. Tier 2 represents countries whose governments do not fully comply with the Trafficking Victims Protection Act (TVPA)’s minimum standards but are making significant efforts to bring themselves into compliance with those standards.

IOL