Monday, August 4, 2014

How London became the child abuse capital of the world: Trafficked here by gangs, prey to pimps, paedophiles and murderers... the booming trade in 'lost' children that shames us all

  • RICHARD HOSKINS investigates how London became trafficking capital
  • Children are used to trick the benefits system and for sex abuse rings
  • A new United Nations report paints a dark picture of the British capital
Victims: Girls are brought to the UK before being sent abroad for sex
Victims: Girls are brought to the UK before being sent abroad for sex

BANGKOK. The little girl winks, then runs her tongue around her upper lip. ‘Do you want a good time, Mister?’ she says.

‘Come and have some fun with me. I’ve got a room nearby,’ she adds, describing the sex acts on offer in perfect English.

Too perfect.

‘Where are you from?’ I say.
‘London. Well, Nigeria.’
‘How old are you?’ I ask.
‘Do you like them young? I’m cute.’ She winks again.

Horror, revulsion and pity sweep me in equal measure. I make it clear why I’m here. I’m a researcher and she agrees to talk at the nearby cafe. Her name is Grace.

I knew I would encounter sex tourists: it is what I’ve been investigating for my next book. But I hadn’t expected to meet a child from Africa with a London accent on the streets of Thailand. 

Grace explains she was brought from Nigeria to Britain where she was moved from house to house. Then, after two years, she was flown to Bangkok.
She works the streets under the watchful gaze of a pimp because even in the hypocrisy of Thailand she would be too young for the main sex bars. 

Here, between Nana Plaza and Soi Cowboy, she has a ripe market of sex tourists, many of them British.

The more I ask Grace, the less she tells. She glances over her shoulder. There’s fear in her red-stained eyes. Eyes that have seen too much in so slight a body. For one thing I do discover: Grace is 12 years old.

I am an author and criminologist – you might know me from my work tracking down the killers of ‘Adam’, the African boy found floating in the Thames, the victim of a ritual killing – and I have spent 13 years investigating cases of exploitation just like Grace.

So where does the blame lie? My disturbing conclusion is that the roots nourishing her tragedy lie neither in Nigeria, nor in Thailand, but in Britain. And that, to our shame, we are doing nothing about it.

There is a clue, perhaps, in the alarming extent of the British trade in child pornography and in last month’s revelation that more than 600 abusers and potential abusers have recently been held by the police. 

The true scandal, though, is bigger and more dangerous than the authorities acknowledge. Because London has become the hub, the epicentre for a global trafficking enterprise involving thousands of children for exploitation, sexual abuse and even, in some unspeakable cases, ritual voodoo killing, as a new United Nations report makes clear.
 
The head of the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child, Kristen Sandberg, who wrote the report, said: ‘Hundreds of children have been abducted from their families in Africa and trafficked to the UK, especially London. Many are raped and sexually abused.’

The true figure, however, runs into thousands. In other words, there is a vast reservoir of lost children gathering in our own capital anonymously shuffled from flat to shabby flat – a dark pool feeding child exploitation and misery across the planet.

It begins, of course, with money: Britain’s generous child benefits system has become an international magnet for fraudsters who are responsible for trafficking thousands of children into this country every year to take advantage of payments and these young victims are prey for other vices, too – a ready made market for sexploitation.

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Traded: Osezua Osolase, pictured far right in a black baseball cap, caught on CCTV at Stansted trafficking young girls from Africa for sexual exploitation abroad and brainwashing them with 'black magic'
Traded: Osezua Osolase, pictured far right in a black baseball cap, caught on CCTV at Stansted trafficking young girls from Africa for sexual exploitation abroad and brainwashing them with 'black magic'


Thomas, a contact of mine in London’s Congolese community, explains how the fraud works. A child is brought into the country and stays with relatives or friends who claim the child to be their own. The child is registered for a school because this starts the correspondence needed to claim child benefit which then triggers working tax credits and other payments.

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