Showing posts with label ITALO_NAIJA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ITALO_NAIJA. Show all posts

Thursday, February 15, 2018

'LA MAFIA NIGERIANA' I SBAGLI DEL CRIMINOLOGO....by Charles O Chukwubike


(RIP Pamela Mastropietro)
Il  paese   e  la comunità  nigeriana (in Italia)   sono ancora  in shock sul fatto  accaduto a Macerata  poi  arriva ‘ la confusione’  sciocco  da un criminologo che  crea  solo confusione, paura e   deviare l’inquirente che  si occupano del fatto  con  tesi antropologica  estratto dai libri  e studi settecentesco.
 
Con tutti  i rispetti, qualcuno puo spiegare  il nostro criminologo  Dott Merluzzo  che  il comportamento,la cultura, l’usanza, le tendenze   e la criminalità sono  anche  in evoluzioni, soprattutto  nella  società giovanile  come  quella  nigeriana. Quindi, dopo che ho sentito il suo clip e letto il suo articolo nel giornale mi  ha confermato che  l’italia  come   un ‘paese vecchia’(modo positivo) continue  ad usare vecchi metodi e gente vecchia per risolvere problemi nuovi. Purtroppo questo ci farà solo male, perdita di tempo e girare sempre intorni ai problemi.

La  tesi che il criminologo ha presentato sulla cosiddetta   ‘mafia Nigeriana’ era interessante,  ma di 60% solo storie e tesi  antiquariato  come i libri che ha letto, e non indirizzano a capire   precisamento il fenomeno e le tendenze attuale  del giovane delinquente nigeriano soprattutto qui in italia.
Nel 1997 tra la prima  e  seconda laurea ho fatto dei studi e tesi all'università (a Roma) sulla migrazione nigeriana in Italia  e  la criminalità nigeriana in  europa e posso dire  che  oggi solo 10 anni dopo le cose sono quasi completamente cambiate perché  la situazioni,motivazioni e ‘tipologia’ delle persone  che arrivano sono cambiati, quindi ci sono grande mutazione  nel modo di agire.   
Un altro esempio molto importante delle sue ommissioni :ci sono due tasselli nel grande mosaico che  ne lui ne nessuno menziona sul fatto attuale perche non e' scritto nel nessun libro,neanche i criminali o delinquente nigeriani in nigeria lo sanno perché  sono combinazioni dell’opportunità e possibilità scoperto nell'attuale paese e cultura ospitante  purtroppo.

La  comunità nigerian  come  tutte le comunità  migrante  continua  ad augurare  che  lo stato con i giusti apparati continua  ad essergli vicino per aiutarla  a combattere  i malviventi tra loro , perché come tanto non sanno i primi ad essere colpiti dai delinquenti sono i connazionali, contrario al fenomeno di fare  tutto l’erba un fascio.
  
L’italia produce  molti antibiotici e sappiamo tutti  la procedura, ma  nel fatto sociale  non possiamo applicare questo senso scientifico? Finché contiamo a studiare una comunità cha abita  proprio sotto la  scala dai libri scritto da un altro persone che abita 10 mila km non li conoscere mai bene i rapporti saranno sempre difficili.
 
Scritto da 
CHUKWUBIKE O CHARLES
(Mediatore Culturle)
chukwubike@gmail.com 

Saturday, May 17, 2014

NIGERIANS IN ITALY ASK THE E.U...TO ASSIST...BRING BACK OUR GIRLS

The Nigerian community in  Italy  today (17/05/2014) in the city of  Latina  had a peaceful march  to  say  “NO” to the “Boko Haram” sect  and   to ask   for the  safe return of the school  girls   kidnapped  by this  group  last month "….BRING BACK OUR GIRLS…."


The  march   started  by 10am and ended at noon.
Many members of the Nigerian community  were present.  The African  DIASPORA    was  also  represented by many people   especially   Cameroonians and Ugandans. The  local authorities and members  of the   Police  force, Carabinieri and  other   security/law enforcement agents were   also there to keep  order/ peace and also show their  solidarity.
 Many Italians   were  also in attendance  to  show their  solidarity to this   initiative. 
A  senator  of the  Italian republic  by name Ivana SIMEONI
(http://www.senato.it/leg/17/BGT/Schede/Attsen/00029181.htm#) was in attendance . She is  a member of the  parliamentary commission  for the defence of  human rights.

Many  Nigerians, other Africans and Italians  made speeches of  encouragement and support  for the Nigerian  government and the parents of the people in the hands of this terrorist group.
The   speaker  of the community and  the organizers  of this  event; Dott Lanre Tytler  thanked  members of the  community, the mayor of  Latina, the  local authorities and  the Italian public in general  for their  support and  enjoined them to encourage  the EU in every way in their  effort  to  help Nigeria  come out of this problem, which  might become a global issue if  ignored.
 

Saturday, January 19, 2013

WELCOME HOME ...ADANNA & AMARACHI UGWU






The first welcome home 'Jii miri-oku omugo'with stockfish,driedfish meat etc  prepared by the new grandma Mrs Mary Ebonini..

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

ANYA NECHE OHA --ROME (Italy)

CHIEFTANCY TITLE TO CHUKWUBIKE OKECHUKWU CHARLES AND WIFE (ANYA NECHE- OHA) BY THE ENUGU STATE COMMUNITY ROME ITALY

Friday, June 1, 2012

Adamma Igbo Masquerade Dance 2

ENUGU   COMMUNITY  ROME  (ITALY) GETTING  READY  TO  BRING
THIS  CLOSE  TO  YOU ON  SUNDAY

Monday, May 7, 2012

ENUGU COMMUNITY DAY IN ROME


Wednesday, October 26, 2011

OKWELE COMMUNITY ROME & FRIENDS







Monday, August 15, 2011

The Nigerian Connection



The Nigerian Connection - People & Power - Al Jazeera English

Investigating the plight of African women caught up in a web of organised crime, prostitution and human trafficking.

People and Power Last Modified: 10 Aug 2011 10:12

Filmmakers: Orlando von Einsiedel and Caroline Pare

Every year tens of thousands of West Africans migrate to Europe in search of a better life. But for some of them that search will end in tragedy, as they fall victim to competing mafia gangs that prey on the hopes of the desperate. In southern Italy, it is Nigerian women who are among the most exploited, with many ending up trapped in the nightmare world of the sex trade.


In the first of two special reports, Juliana Ruhfus investigates the plight of African women caught up in a web of organised crime, prostitution and people trafficking. In the following account Chiara Caprio, an Italian journalist who was involved in the making of the film, describes what they found out in southern Italy.

The ghetto of Destra Volturno, an assembly of houses once used by Neapolitan tourists, is surrounded by flowers as it hosts the funeral of Mary Morad, a seven-year-old from Ghana. She was killed by a man with psychiatric problems. But in Castel Volturno, more than one-third of the 25,000 official citizens are African and, in particular, Ghanaian and Nigerian.

Al Jazeera came to investigate the phenomenon of Nigerian organised crime in this small town, quickly forgotten after serious riots in 2008, when hundreds of Africans took to the streets to protest against the massacre of six young Ghanaians committed by Giuseppe Setola, the army of the Casalesi clan.

Mary's family is waiting for the coffin and tension grows as delays and friction increase. Bose Atta, Mary's Nigerian mother, who was trafficked to Italy to be forced into prostitution, is nervous. She cries as her friends express anger against Mary's father, a man from Ghana who is now married to another Nigerian woman.
Finally, the coffin arrives and a group of men start celebrating with a Muslim rite. An improvised march towards the cemetery starts under a warm sun overheating a tormented African community.


Stronger than ever

"The Domitiana crosses Castel Volturno for 28 kilometres," says Stefano Ricciardiello, a detective at the local police station, a small and shabby office overwhelmed by new and old papers covering stories of murders, repatriations and organised crime. "The new African mafia's activities have invaded the whole territory."
He is showing us along the roads where, one after another, Nigerian women and young girls are waiting for clients.

According to the United Nations Interregional Crime and Justice Research Institute (UNICRI), Italy is now the main destination for more than 10,000 Nigerian prostitutes, trafficked from Benin City to European cities and criminal hubs, just like the Domitiana and its coast.

"Nigerian criminals are able to find agreements with all the mafias, from Colombians to Chinese. But it's an easy game for them in Italy also for another reason: the high number of Italian clients who look for prostitutes night and day," says Giovanni Conzo, a prosecutor at the anti-mafia section in Naples.

"This organisation is stronger than ever. We should stop them before they take full control of our region," he adds. But Conzo's words offer just a glimmer of hope.
Using voodoo to enslav
Isoke Aikpitanyi, a former victim of trafficking and now the main reference point for Nigerian women in Italy, knows how this business is managed in Caserta's area. As she walks in Castel Volturno's historic centre, she explains: "Today in Italy there are almost 10,000 madams, each one in control of an average of two or three girls."
Madams are the key, she explains. They are the main actors in this exploitation. They force girls into prostitution and ask for money to repay the debt. They work with "brothers", men who are in charge of physically trafficking the "babies", as girls forced into prostitution are called.

But Nigerian human trafficking is often associated with drug smuggling and a distorted use of religious tradition.

The women and girls are often forced to undergo a Juju oath-swearing ritual that commits them to repaying the money they owe to their smugglers on pain of death or insanity.
"The Juju, the voodoo rite, it's not a bad practice. It was used to bring justice, but they ruined everything," says Isoke with anger. "They don't care how they make their money as far as they make it. They use Juju to enslave."

Even in this hell, there are people who try not to lose hope. Sister Antonia, a Nigerian nun of the Sacred Heart of Jesus order, manages a shelter, the Casa Santa Maria dell'Accoglienza, launched in 2000 in the Fernandes centre by the Capua-based Caritas. Here, more than 70 women have found a place to stay and 10 children have been born.

"We were called by the bishop of Capua, Mons. Bruno Schettino, to promote these girls' integration. They are all former prostitutes. If they want to change their lives, they know they'll always find a place here," Sister Antonia says.

The women can stay for between six months and a year, a period when they dedicate their time to education and "to gain[ing] their dignity back," explains Sister Antonia. The nuns give the girls the opportunity to write down their stories and explain what happened and who forced them into prostitution.
"We try to make them understand that Juju won't have any effect on them," she says.
But we met girls who still work on the streets and believe in the agreements they made. Some of them have to repay debts of up to $58,000 and are still terrified of the powerful consequences of Juju on their families and themselves.


The Nigerian Connection can be seen from Wednesday, August 10, at the following times GMT: Wednesday: 2230; Thursday: 0930; Friday: 0330; Saturday: 1630; Sunday: 2230; Monday: 0930.




The Nigerian Connection II:

In the second part of the special investigation, The Nigerian Connection II, Juliana Ruhfus follows the trail from Italy back to Benin City in Nigeria, from where women, desperately seeking an escape from grinding poverty, are trafficked to Europe.
To pay for their travel, many of them incur massive debts to organised crime gangs in the false belief that a lucrative regular job awaits them at the other end. Often they are forced to undergo a Juju oath-swearing ritual that commits them to repaying the money on pain of death or insanity.

When they arrive in Europe, they discover the only way they can do this is by agreeing to work in the sex trade. A Juju priest who is involved in the trade justifies the use of ritual practices on the grounds that he is offering a service to the community.
But as Juliana discovers, it is not just traditional African religions in West Africa that contribute to this trade on bonded labour. Evangelical Christian pastors have been involved too.

The Nigerian Connection II can be seen from Wednesday, August 17, 2011.

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

ADANNA & IKENNA 10.10.10- ARRIVAL












Posted by PicasaFOTO BY: CHUKBYKE 
((Roma)

Sunday, May 2, 2010

Countering trafficking in human being

Nigeria

Countering trafficking in human being

The Programme "Preventing and Combating Trafficking of Minors and Young Women from Nigeria to Italy" funded by the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, was carried out by UNICRI in cooperation with UNODC, Nigerian Institutions and NGOs from March 2008 to April 2010. Designed as a follow-up of the pilot project, which was implemented during 2002-2004 - [to find out more go to Phase 1 of the Programme], the present Programme intended to:  read on..............................................

ENGLISH

ITALIAN




Sunday, March 7, 2010

Esibizione culturale @Carnevale Cisternese: 2010




by Nneoma June Katia Chukwubike

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

THE OATH......



Posted by Picasa



Monday, October 12, 2009

Thursday, November 6, 2008

ITALO_NAIJA ..ROME INFO

Photobucket

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

CAVOLFIORI....CAULIFLOWER ..AS A MEASURE

The Nigerian independence anniversary came and went ‘as usual’. This year I promised myself to add more dose to my ‘patriotism pack’, so I made sure I wasn’t at any Refugee identification camp therefore I travelled up Rome to stay near home and feast with my Muslim friends at Ramadan as we wait for the independence, a day after. I was also to attend the ‘STOP RAZZISMO’ demonstration in Rome city on the 4th October, so you can see I had all good reasons to pray not to be called up for any job far from the Eternal city - SPQR- for a week, not minding I needed the money than ever.

The independence was very much on my mind because of the increase dose of patriotism which I am trying out once more, therefore we planned to meet with some of the Nigerian kids that spent two weeks holiday with us in August; I continued with this mini project while some of my colleagues waited for the ‘usual’ annual invitation from the Embassy, ( I know how KINGDOMS function) so I cared less, however, I won the bet with my theories on Kingdoms. They got no invitations this year!!!; Some felt bad because they do not know how Kingdoms function. In my next post I will say more of what I have learnt from the italo_naija lots of this old but new KINGDOM in Rome.

As I drove to a shopping complex on the 30th September ,my new dose of patriotism was somehow pricked by some scene that I never imagined in Italy. Italy where I have seen more that 15.000 Nigerian prostitutes (hustlers they call themselves),where all known and unknown deviant cults in Nigeria are having growing proselytes, Italy with more Nigerian Pentecostal churches than in Nigeria herself, Italy that ever male Nigerian is regarded as a liar, ‘pusher’, trickster or a potential ‘underground junior Mafioso’; Italy also where the Nigeria community is regarded as the most schooled ; a paradox.

We may be everything and can be expected to be getting to other levels but I never had the bad sensation I had when I saw a group of Nigerians (young, handsome, healthy) boys calling on cars at the parking lot of that mall the way some “ALAYE BOYS” do in Lagos. They beckoned on me with the typical vulgar Nigerian hiss you only hear in Lagos, (the sort some old Fulanis use to recall errant cattle to the flock) with fake accompanying bowings and genuflections still typical of what you see among Eko ruffians and in some other regions of Nigeria. All these for an exchange of some coins or to return your trolley for the coin inside it. This was not a bad thing per se compared to other comportments of Nigerians here , I just couldn’t contain the exportation of this way of life which I suppose we can do without here. I was particularly angered because they were very nice looking youths …Nigerian future and hope…?

They woke me up from my sleep, infringed my dream and the little dose of patriotism I was administering to my ‘patriotism pack’ throughout this period.

They rushed on me and the following conversation ensued :
Boy Ciao
Me . how no?
Boy. You speak English?
Boy. You be Naija?
Me . before nko?
Boy . haaa omo naija miiii
Me you?
Boy. I be Yoruba
Boy I be igbo
Boy I be edo
Boy I be urobo
Boy I be edo
Me, OK ,me I be igbo.. Enugu state ..wawa man.
Boys laughs…. hahaha
Boy . I think don see you before . You be police ?
Me. Nooooo.
Boy. But I saw you working with the immigration police at the station?
Boy. Even me I remember I don see you the time they rescue us from water from Libya come Italy for Sicilian sea side You enter military vehicle that day.
Me. Yes na me . Every person wey dey work with police no be police. Police dey under ministry of Internal affair and no be only them dey there, and other international agencies handle refugee matters.
Boys. Ok bros we for say oooo!! Haa police people no be good people oo.
Me. But na them rescue you guys .
Boys. That one be true sha


A lot of their problems were discussed before I went to do my shopping. They were seven but two never cared to come close , they were busy hawking or begging for money which they exchanged with stockings, napkins etc.
When I came out two gently came to help me with my bags. One of them saw in the bag some cavolfiori ..(cauliflower). And this sparked another discussion on cross-cultural nutrition /food .
Boy. Ahh Oga you dey chop this thing?
Me . yes my brother you no like am?
Boy. Noooo. God no gree. That thing sabi smell oo. I no go even enter house wey them cook am.
Me. Na the same story. I had the same story when I came newly., now I even pay to eat it in the restaurant .
Boy. You mean you use your sweated money to order and eat this?
Me . yes. no be the same as to come buy am here and cook.
Boy. Bros na him be se you don stay too much for this oyinbo country , you don become one of them oo, no go home remain youooo.

Sincerely I couldn’t contain my laughter. I gave them my card and some addresses for assistance and left.
Meeting these 5 Nigerian (Libyan boys- name for those entering through the desert and sea) really deflected and altered my dreams of Nigeria and that my new dose of patriotism, but I must admit it was fun talking with them. Nigerians can be fun and sincere in telling you their mind if you are able to relax them quick in a communication.
Lets continue the dream.

COMMENTS

SHAITSU

SHAITSU
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