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Shutdown order: Sex workers go into hiding in Umuahia

3 Min Read
Ikpeazu

Commercial sex workers in Umuahia, the Abia capital, have gone into hiding to evade police arrest, following state government’s order shutting down brothels in the city.

News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) correspondent, who monitored the enforcement of the government’s directive, reports that the sex workers now lived in palpable fear.

NAN reports that Gov. Okezie Ikpeazu on Monday ordered the immediate shutdown of brothels located on Orlu, Kaduna and Arochukwu streets, among others, in the capital city.

Ikpeazu also directed the immediate prosecution of proprietors of such facilities, including joints where illicit drugs were sold.
The state government alleged that the brothels and joints had been turned into hideout for hoodlums from where they rob and molest innocent citizens, especially in the night.

It, therefore, directed security agencies in the state to urgently rid the areas of suspected hoodlums.

Read Also: “Jimi Agbaje has not left PDP”

Meanwhile, some of the major brothels that used to be a beehive of activities were empty and under lock and key when NAN visited on Wednesday.

The facilities included Classy Guest House, National Hotel, Daba-in and Freedom Hotel, all located on Orlu Street.

Other brothels vacated by the girls are Amala Guest House, located on Lagos Street and Universal Social Centre, also on Cameroun Street.

However, at Connection Bar, located on Imo Lane, a number of the sex workers were seen attending to their male customers.

The girls said that the brothel had become a refuse to some of their colleagues from the places that were shutdown.

It was, however, a comic moment when the girls took to their heels, when they heard the sound of a siren, unknown to them that the sound came from a bank bullion van.

“Hey, na bank people o. I see those police, I think say they don come again to arrest us,” one of the girls told her colleagues.
They described their experience as horrifying, saying that security operatives had been preying on them since the order was given by the state government. (NAN)

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