Warning: This story incorporates particulars of sexual assault.
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Uyo, Nigeria – When Blessing* boarded a bus early on a January morning in 2017 for the 60km (37 miles) journey from her dwelling in Calabar, in Nigeria’s Cross River State, to a village in neighbouring Akwa Ibom State, she thought she was going to satisfy a company government a couple of potential job provide.
The ten-hour ordeal that adopted nonetheless haunts her, years later.
It began with a job posting on Jiji, a web based commerce platform, in December 2016.
On the time, Blessing was 24 years previous. She had simply completed a diploma course and was planning to start college the next yr. However first, she wanted to save cash for her charges and residing bills. And that meant discovering a job.
Like many different younger Nigerians in search of employment within the digital age, Blessing made a social media put up in quest of job affords, leaving her contact info in order that potential employers might attain her.
A number of weeks later, she received a name from a person who advised her there was a gap for an entry-level function at ExxonMobil, an American oil and fuel firm with a drilling licence in Nigeria. He requested that she convey a tough copy of her ID to an deal with within the neighbouring state to proceed the appliance course of.
She had doubts however hoped her weeks of job looking have been lastly about to repay.
“I advised [the man] that I wasn’t snug [travelling so far to meet him], being that I don’t know him. However he insisted that I didn’t have a alternative. And I used to be desperately in want of a job at the moment,” Blessing, who’s now 30, recollects.
When she advised her mom in regards to the name, she too tried to steer the person that Blessing might merely scan her ID and e mail him a duplicate of it, as a substitute of travelling throughout states. However the man insisted, so Blessing’s mom borrowed the cash for her bus fare.
‘Watch out for canines’
After 4 hours on the bus, Blessing arrived within the city of Uyo in Akwa Ibom State at 10am.
“Once I received there, I referred to as him. He despatched me the placement [an address in the village] through SMS. He advised me to take a taxi to Oron street, then I ought to take a [motorcycle taxi] and search for a home with [a] ‘watch out for canines’ [sign],” she says.
The street to the village of Nung Ikono Obio is untarred and lined by thick vegetation on either side. When she noticed the situation of the street, Blessing contemplated turning again however reasoned that she had already spent an excessive amount of on journey.
“I didn’t wish to go dwelling with out suggestions [for my mother],” she recollects.
However when Blessing arrived on the home with the “watch out for canines” signal, she was shocked by what she noticed. It was the positioning of ongoing development; outdoors, labourers have been transferring sand from a heap to combine concrete which they used for the muse.
The person she had been talking to on the telephone additionally shocked her – he seemed too younger to be a company government. It later turned out that he was simply 16.
Blessing says he requested her to sit down on a bench and anticipate his father, who would talk about the job provide together with her. In the meantime, the labourers continued working round her.
“There have been individuals working so I didn’t suspect something,” she recollects. “At about 2 o’clock, I turned uncomfortable as a result of time was operating quick and I used to be purported to be heading again to Calabar.”
The boy advised her to not fear, that they would depart as quickly as he had paid the labourers.
However at 5pm, when the labourers left, the boy locked the gate, and Blessing was left alone with him contained in the compound. When she protested, he threatened to kill her and demanded that she enter a close-by room.
She describes what occurred subsequent. “He advised me to obey him and never hesitate, in any other case he would harm me and nobody would come to my rescue. The room was so darkish however there was a small mattress. He advised me to sit down on it. He advised me to undress. That was once I began pleading.”
Blessing began crying. She advised him that she didn’t need the job any extra.
“He introduced out a knife tied with purple cloths and [said] that if I didn’t undress, he would stab me.”
Then he raped her.
Rape and homicide
In August this yr, Uduak “Ezekiel” Akpan, now 22, was discovered responsible of raping and murdering Iniubong Umoren, a 26-year-old job seeker, in April 2021. After Umoren’s case began trending on social media, Blessing noticed posts and realised the attacker was the identical man who had raped her in 2017.
Like Blessing, Umoren had made an open name on social media for a job. “#AkwaIbomTwitter please. I’m actually in want of a job, one thing to do to maintain my thoughts and soul collectively whereas contributing dutifully to the group. My location is Uyo. I’m artistic, actually good at considering critically, and most significantly a quick learner. CV out there on request,” she tweeted on April 27, 2021.
As with Blessing, Akpan had then lured her to his dwelling – the identical one, nonetheless below development all these years later – below the pretext of a job interview.
Whereas there, Umoren despatched a one-second WhatsApp audio message to her buddy Uduak Obong. When Obong referred to as her again, she heard her buddy’s screams. So she despatched a frantic tweet suggesting Umoren could be at risk. On-line, Nigerians started investigating. Inside a number of hours, they discovered Akpan’s Fb pages and dug up his digital footprint. A Twitter person received a leak of Akpan’s name log. With the decision logs, he geolocated the place Akpan was when he had final referred to as Umoren’s telephone.
The next day, Umoren’s physique was present in a shallow grave in the identical compound in Nung Ikono Obio the place Blessing had been raped years earlier.
After Akpan attacked Blessing, she was too traumatised to report it. She didn’t even inform her mom what had occurred. However she did go to the hospital to get examined for sexually transmitted illnesses.
Blessing got here ahead after Umoren’s demise, and prosecutors referred to as her to present proof towards Akpan at his trial. Though she didn’t find yourself testifying – she was advised her testimony was now not wanted – she sees her choice as a primary try at in search of justice for what occurred to her.
Within the assertion Akpan gave to the police earlier than his trial commenced – a confession he later tried to recant, saying it was obtained below duress, though the decide dominated towards him – he admitted to having attacked six different ladies, together with Blessing. Umoren was the one one he killed.
A number of victims
Twenty-five-year-old Miriam Akpan (no relation to the perpetrator) was one among Akpan’s different victims. In December 2020, determined for a job, she posted on a Fb group referred to as Job Emptiness in Uyo, promoting her pursuits and {qualifications}.
“Please, something, I can do,” she wrote, mentioning that she had the equal of a highschool certificates and would take any job. Nobody provided her one till Akpan mentioned he would pay her 35,000 Nigerian naira ($80) a month as a secretary in an “built-in farm”. Miriam was excited. For somebody with no college diploma, a job that paid greater than the minimal month-to-month wage of 30,000 naira ($69) felt like a terrific alternative.
She agreed to satisfy him to debate the main points of the job provide. However as a substitute of an interview, she was drugged and raped.
For greater than a yr Miriam had suppressed the reminiscence of what occurred to her. She saved it from her sister, the one fast household she has. However as individuals tried to find Umoren, she noticed Akpan’s image being shared on Twitter and all of the emotion she had tried to bury got here dashing again. “I didn’t even give it some thought, I simply commented [on Twitter] that this individual robbed me final December,” she says.
However her final identify raised suspicions, and a few accused her of being associated to Uduak Akpan. Umoren’s relations didn’t instantly belief her when she suggested them to go to Akpan’s home that night time to seek for the lacking girl.
The next day, Miriam’s instructions led the police and Umoren’s relations to the compound the place they discovered her physique.
Miriam’s court docket testimony additionally helped convict Akpan.
He was subsequently sentenced to demise by hanging for the homicide of Umoren, and life imprisonment for her rape.
Hovering unemployment
However Akpan will not be the one individual to have taken benefit of Nigeria’s employment disaster.
It is not uncommon for Nigerians to announce on social media that they’re in search of jobs. With a hovering unemployment fee, many discover unconventional methods of discovering work. Graduates are typically seen holding placards at main bus stops and expressways pleading for jobs; others make on-line banners; and members of the Nationwide Youth Corps who end their service additionally put up their certificates on social media, asserting that they’re prepared for employment.
Nigeria’s unemployment fee stands at 33.3 %, in accordance with information from the Nationwide Bureau of Statistics, which implies that greater than 23 million individuals both haven’t any job or work for lower than 20 hours per week. Amongst these aged between 15 and 35, the unemployment fee stood at 42.5 % in 2020.
The excessive variety of unemployed individuals in search of jobs additionally makes Nigeria’s labour market a “breeding floor” for criminals who lure candidates in with job interviews, mentioned Taibat Hussain, a youth and gender equality advocate. “Criminals … lure candidates in with pretend job interviews, after which rob, rape and, in excessive instances, kill them. This class of youth, after spending years with out employment alternatives, falls prey to the ways and is left with no different alternative than to present in,” she advised Al Jazeera.
As a part of reporting this story, Al Jazeera met a 26-year-old man arrested in Cross River State for the alleged rape of an 18-year-old girl to whom he had promised a job. We aren’t naming him as he’s awaiting trial.
When Al Jazeera met him at Calabar Correctional Centre, he was sporting a blue shirt with its collar raised and a pair of too-small slippers. He had already been behind bars for greater than a yr. He advised Al Jazeera he had slept with the lady however denied raping her. “I used to be going to assist her get the job however she is offended as a result of the job didn’t come as quick as she wished,” he mentioned.
However in an announcement the lady gave to the police detailing her expertise, she advised a unique story. She met the person whereas in search of work vacancies, she mentioned. He advised her there was a cleansing place open in his office – a producing firm in Calabar.
“He requested me to convey my utility to his home in order that he will help me right it and submit [it]. He checked out my utility and mentioned it isn’t right. He wrote one other one and advised me to recopy it with my handwriting. After I completed copying it, I wished to go however he didn’t let me go. He began kissing me and touching my breast. He used his proper hand to carry my fingers collectively and his left hand to cowl my mouth,” her assertion within the police report reads.
Consultants say that almost all victims of doubtful employment scams are youthful ladies in search of low-skilled jobs, who make up a major variety of the unemployed inhabitants, in accordance with the Nationwide Bureau of Statistics.
Extorted by ‘jobs on the market’
Whereas predators like Akpan benefit from determined job seekers, there are registered firms that additionally extort these determined individuals in different methods.
Oladeinde Olawoyin, a Nigerian journalist who has investigated pretend employment businesses, discovered 50 instances of candidates being extorted. These businesses get candidates to pay for a registration package deal – normally charging 5,000-10,000 naira ($11-23) – with the promise of discovering them a job, but most by no means do. A few of these firms are registered as consultancies to bypass the regulation that makes it unlawful for an individual to pay to achieve employment, Olawoyin explains.
“Most of the businesses should not have jobs to present,” he says. “They cost candidates for registration varieties and don’t actually get them any job. There are a number of who might need [a] few jobs however they recruit extra individuals than the [number of] job[s] they’ve. In a pool of about 1,000, they may throw in perhaps 20 jobs or much less.
“These businesses know that Nigeria is [a] free for all. So that they … gamble with individuals’s life and extort them. Most frequently they alter their location when their notoriety spreads. They alter their identify and placement. So it’s attainable {that a} job seeker would possibly get scammed two, three, or 4 instances by the identical set of individuals with totally different names and addresses.”
John Nyamani, the director of employment and wages at Nigeria’s Ministry of Labour, advised Al Jazeera that “desperation”, social media and job seekers wanting a fast repair have been in charge for individuals being preyed upon.
“We don’t wish to comply with the principles as a result of we’re in a rush to get employment,” he mentioned.
Nyamani suggested job seekers to be circumspect of alternatives marketed on social media that can’t be traced to a longtime organisation. “They’re deceived with jobs and it’s due to the state of affairs of issues. The federal government can solely attempt its greatest by the safety businesses to coach individuals on the way to watch out. Not each advert you see on social media [is one] that you simply reply to. If you must reply to it, make clarifications, and ask the Ministry of Labour. The Ministry of Labour has a very good, useful web site,” he added, referring to the Nationwide Employment Digital Labour Trade (NELEX).
The web site has a pool of vacancies and an inventory of authorized organisations the place Nigerians in search of employment can perform background checks on their potential employers, Nyamani mentioned.
Nevertheless, advocate Hussain, who has seemed into the federal government’s youth unemployment discount scheme, says such initiatives solely present “non permanent reduction”, and that there’s a want for everlasting and sustainable connections between the labour market and authorities initiatives that hope to assist younger individuals.
For a lot of, Umoren’s demise highlighted how dire the unemployment state of affairs is in Nigeria, and the dangers younger persons are keen to take to discover a job.
Miriam has gone again to highschool the place she is studying to grow to be an information scientist. She mentioned dealing with Akpan once more was one of many hardest issues she has ever carried out however, after the incident, she determined to relocate to Lagos to start out afresh.
“I’ve left Uyo and the whole lot else behind me,” she says. “I can now construct a future that I need. I purchased a laptop computer. I’m going to start out studying the way to code.”
For Blessing, it has been tougher. She is going to solely really feel that there was justice when Akpan hangs, she says, including: “I don’t suppose he’ll ever be killed.”
*Title modified to guard the sufferer’s privateness