Brothels operating in Bariga area of Lagos and
its environs have been hit by acute shortage of commercial sex workers following
the clampdown by Lagos State Government on brothels and places suspected to
serve as hideouts for criminal elements in the area.
A special task force established by
the state government had raided some brothels in the area in whatSunday Sun gathered to be one of the strategic
moves by the government to arrest the spate of violent crime in the area.
Last week, Sunday Sun had reported the death of a 65-year-old
woman, who was burnt to death, when hoodlums suspected to be cult members
invaded Oshinfolarin Street on a reprisal and razed the building where she
resided. Bariga has in the recent months become a hotbed of cult activities.
Following the January 23 incident, which claimed one life, the
state government had vowed to come down heavily on cult members and other
criminal elements in the state.
In the wake of the clampdown on brothels and other places suspected
to habour criminals in Bariga and its environs last Wednesday, no fewer than
100 suspected criminals including commercial sex workers were arrested.
The suspects were arraigned in batches at various courtrooms in
the Lagos Magistrate Court sitting in Ogba on charges bothering on prostitution
and wandering.
At Court 15, where Sunday Sun reporter monitored the proceedings, no
fewer than 30 suspected sex workers arraigned before Magistrate A.S Odusanya
pleaded guilty to the one-count charge slammed against them.
The development as Sunday Sun observed may have caused a serious
crisis for brothel owners and operators as they made frantic efforts to secure
the release of the sex workers operating in their respective brothels.
Some of operators were overheard lamenting the situation, which
they claimed had impacted negatively on their business.
Meanwhile a follow-up surveillance in the area after the midweek
raid, according to a highly placed source, indicated that other brothels,
which were not affected by last Wednesday’s onslaught have been deserted by
commercial sex workers while most of the brothels were said to be under lock.
“It is going to be a sustained exercise. I don’t see the exercise
ending until the area is rid off unwanted elements, who are bent on turning
Bariga into another flashpoint of crime in the state,” said the source.
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Sunday Sun
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