DEBT PAYMENT

Nigerian child brides advertised on FB, sold to old men

In Summary

• Families who are so desperate to give their children away for money turn to Facebook so their kinsmen can check them out. 

Facebook user shows the Facebook App in his Phone in Nairobi On October 25,2018. Photo/Enos Teche
Facebook user shows the Facebook App in his Phone in Nairobi On October 25,2018. Photo/Enos Teche
Image: FILE

Nigerian child brides as young as ten are being advertised on Facebook and then sold to pay off their parents' debts - it has been claimed. 

Young girls in the Becheve community, a group of 17 villages in Obanliku, Nigeria, are also regularly exchanged for food, livestock or cash, according to the Daily Beast.

The girls, who are referred to as 'money women' or 'money wives' are often advertised on Facebook and sometimes sold to men 'old enough to be their grandfathers'.   

One girl, Monica, told the Daily Beast how she and her sister were sold without their consent to clear a debt their father owed to a distant relative. 

Monica said she and her sister got married a month apart to men they had never met and who were far older than them. 

'My father knew nothing about Facebook until my elder brother bought him a smartphone and convinced him to join Facebook and post our photographs whenever he likes,' Monica said.

'He'll buy new clothes and force me and my sisters to put them on before taking photographs of us.'

'It is young people who convince old men to look for wives on Facebook,' said Monica, who ran away from her husband to live with a friend less than a year after she got married.

'The man I married said his oldest son showed him my photo on Facebook and directed him to my father.' 

Usually in the Becheve community, parents of the money brides take the girls to men who can afford to pay for their daughters

But in recent months, families who are so desperate to give their children away for money turn to Facebook so their kinsmen can check them out. 

'The practice is meant to boost the status of the men in Becheve community,' Magnus Ejikang, a local chief in Ogbakoko, told The Daily Beast. 'The more brides you have, the more respect you gain in the community.'  

A Facebook Spokesperson told MailOnline: 'Any form of human trafficking - whether posts, pages, ads or groups - is not allowed on Facebook and we remove this content whenever we identify it.

'We're always improving the methods we use to identify content that breaks our policies, including doubling our safety and security team to more than 30,000 and investing in technology.'

WATCH: The latest videos from the Star