Friday, October 16, 2009

Woman Convicted in Child Slavery Ring

(Newark, New Jersey) A child slavery and human trafficking operation has been busted by federal agents and the leader convicted.
A woman accused of forcing girls from Africa to work in New Jersey hair braiding salons for no pay has been convicted of human trafficking and visa fraud in a case her lawyer says highlighted African cultural norms that failed to translate in America.

Prosecutors argued that Akouavi Kpade Afolabi, called "Sister" by the women she oversaw, helped bring at least 20 girls between the ages of 10 and 19 from the West African nations of Togo and Ghana on fraudulent visas to New Jersey starting in 2002.

They said she manipulated the impoverished young women, who aspired to live better lives in America, and kept them in slavery-like conditions while stealing all their pay — even tips as meager as fifty cents.

Afolabi's lawyer, Bukie Adetula, countered that his client was considered a benevolent mother figure and revered community leader — both in her native Togo and New Jersey. He said she was known for lending people money and aiding young women to escape their poverty-stricken homeland to learn a marketable skill in America.
The girls reportedly were psychologically and sexually abused. I wonder if those are also features of African cultural norms that failed to translate in America.

Incidentally, this report has all the elements of sensational news. You've got child slavery, human trafficking, sexual abuse, visa fraud, New Jersey, all the stuff of a story with legs. It seems odd that the mainstream media hasn't given it prominence.

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