fbpx
Wikipedia

Organised crime in Nigeria

Organised crime in Nigeria includes activities by fraudsters, bandits (such as looting and kidnappings on major highways), drug traffickers and racketeers, which have spread across Western Africa. Nigerian criminal gangs rose to prominence in the 1980s, owing much to the globalisation of the world's economies and the high level of lawlessness and corruption in the country.[citation needed]

Structure

Crime organisations in Nigeria, typically do not follow the mafia-type model followed by other groups.[citation needed] They appear to be less formal and more organised along familial and ethnic lines, thus making them less susceptible by infiltration from law enforcement. Police investigations are further hampered by the fact there are at least 250 distinct ethnic languages in Nigeria. Other criminal gangs from Nigeria appear to be smaller-scale freelance operations.[1] Groups from Benin City are especially notorious for human trafficking.[2]

Area Boys

Area Boys (also known as Agberos)[3] are loosely organised gangs of street children and teenagers, composed mostly of males, who roam the streets of Lagos, Lagos State in Nigeria.[4] They extort money from passers-by, public transporters and traders, sell illegal drugs, act as informal security guards, and perform other "odd jobs" in return for compensation.[5][6]

One of the methods Area Boys use for extortion is to surround pedestrians, drivers, and passengers in vehicles, which are stuck in traffic, and force them to pay for some actual or fictitious service before letting them go.[5] To aid in collecting money during traffic jams, the area boys place nails in the road and dig up the streets.[7] Among the Area Boys are both sellers and users of illegal drugs.[8] A study states "most of them use drugs (cocaine, heroin, marijuana, etc.) either as occasional users or addicts, or as peddlers." Of 77 respondents to a survey, 12.2% dealt drugs, while 60.3% were addicts themselves. Sale of drugs takes place both in Nigeria and abroad, and sales abroad have earned a small percentage of the sellers significant amounts of money.[8]

Confraternities

 
The Neo Black Movement often claim to be entirely unrelated to Black Axe in public statements, however the symbol is shown on their posters.

Highly organised Nigerian confraternities/campus gangs operate worldwide. For example, the Neo Black Movement of Africa. In its own words, the Neo Black Movement of Africa is a "registered non-partisan, non-religious and non-tribal organisation that sincerely seek to revive, retain and modify where necessary those aspects of African culture that would provide vehicles of progress for Africa and her peoples".[9] Nonetheless, law enforcement officials who have investigated members in recent years, for example in Canada, the UK and Italy are convinced that the movement has strayed far from its original path.[10]

Behind the welfare facade of the Neo Black Movement[11] hides indeed the most dreaded Nigerian campus cult, the Black Axe confraternity.[12] NBM usually state that they are not identical with Black Axe for propaganda purposes. While the atrocities committed by campus cult members are well-known, very little is known about other activities of the Neo Black Movement.[13] Offiong claims that the group's initial goal of promoting Black Consciousness and fighting for the dignity of Africans and their freedom from neo-colonialism has deteriorated into self-serving behaviour that is "notoriously and brutally violent".[14] He maintains that violence has in fact become the cult's official policy.[15]

Apart from the atrocities in the orbit of NBM, most members of the confraternity are involved in fraud and cyber crime. The main reason to join the confraternity is (besides the pressure and intimidation[16] that is applied to students to join) the fact that the confraternity has infiltrated all spheres of Nigerian society and serves the main purpose of helping its members climb the career ladder and going unpunished for their crimes by means of their nepotistic structure.

Investigations and a number of arrests of members of NBM by the Italian police brought to light various crimes committed by members of NBM. NBM and other cults were found guilty of smuggling of drugs, extortion, 419 fraud, prostitution, passport falsification, and cloning of credit cards.[citation needed]

In 2011, eight more members of NBM were arrested in Italy for the same offences mentioned above. They are referred to as an international criminal organisation and Nigerian Mafia.[17] According to internal documents, the confraternity helps members to immigrate illegally to Europe. Nigerian fraud rings have been exported to Europe, America, and Asia (see external links section). In 2015 a sophisticated car theft ring run by the Black Axe organised crime ring was busted in Toronto, Canada. The ring had stolen more than 500 luxury cars in one year, valued at 30 million US dollars.[18][19]

According to the police, the Nigerians are increasing their alliances with the Neapolitan Camorra and the Sicilian Mafia, the alliances are most regarded to prostitution, drugs and human trafficking business.[20]

Activities

Fraud

An advance-fee scam is a form of fraud and one of the most common types of confidence tricks.[21] The scam typically involves promising the victim a significant share of a large sum of money, in return for a small up-front payment, which the fraudster requires in order to obtain the large sum. If a victim makes the payment, the fraudster either invents a series of further fees for the victim or simply disappears.[22]

Drug trafficking

Nigerian criminal groups are heavily involved in drug trafficking, shipping heroin from Asian countries to Europe and America; and cocaine from South America to Europe and South Africa[citation needed]. The large numbers of ethnic Nigerians in countries like India and Thailand give their gangs ready access to around 90% of the world's heroin.[23]

In the United States, Nigerian drug traffickers are important distributors of heroin, from importing it into the country to distribution level and selling it to lower-level street gangs.[24] These criminal groups are also known to launder drug money through domestic football clubs in the Nigeria Premier League, and are rumoured to make additional money through match fixing activity within football matches.

Human trafficking and kidnappings

Nigeria is a source, transit, and destination country for women and children subjected to trafficking in persons including forced labour and forced prostitution. There is a huge menace of Kidnappings on Northern Highways as well as allover Nigeria, claims to be from Fulani Bandits. Trafficked Nigerian women and children are recruited from rural areas within Nigeria - women and girls for involuntary domestic servitude and sexual exploitation, and boys for forced labour in street vending, domestic servitude, mining, and begging.[25]

Nigerian women and children are taken from Nigeria to other West and Central African countries, primarily Gabon, Cameroon, Ghana, Chad, Benin, Togo, Niger, Burkina Faso, and the Gambia, for the same purposes. Children from West African states like Benin, Togo, and Ghana – where Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) rules allow for easy entry – are also forced to work in Nigeria, and some are subjected to hazardous jobs in Nigeria's granite mines. Nigerian women and girls are taken to Europe, especially to Italy and Russia, and to the Middle East and North Africa, for forced prostitution.[25]

Impact

According to the FBI, Nigerian criminal enterprises are the most notable of all African criminal enterprises. They are considered to be among the most aggressive and expansionist international criminal groups, operating in more than 80 countries of the world and are established on all populated continents of the world.[26] Their most profitable activity is drug trafficking, though they are more famous for their financial fraud which costs the US alone approximately US$1 to 2 billion annually.[27][citation needed]

Nigerian organised crime in other countries

Canada

Police in Toronto became aware of the presence of the Black Axe gang in 2013. The gang exerts influence over Canada's Nigerian expatriate community and is predominantly involved in scamming. Authorities estimate the Black Axe's membership in the country at approximately two-hundred.[28]

France

The Nigerian mafia in France is involved in the sex trafficking of Nigerian women and girls,[29] as well as heroin trafficking, in which they have collaborated with Chinese triads and other groups.[30]

Germany

The Nigerian mafia is responsible for the smuggling and pimping of the majority of the African women working as prostitutes in Germany.[31]

India

Nigerians are among the major players in the narcotics trade in Goa and Mumbai. The coast of north Goa provides an entry point of South American cocaine for Nigerian traffickers, who have come into conflict with Indian gangs.[32]

Ireland

Nigerian dealers are credited with introducing crack cocaine to Ireland in the early 2000s.[33] Europol have identified Nigerian organised crime gangs as being responsible for trafficking children from Nigeria to Ireland for work in the sex trade.[34] Nigerian gangs are also involved in the cannabis trade, using contacts in South Africa to smuggle the drugs into Ireland via couriers and through parcels,[35] as well as in fraud and money laundering rings.[36]

Italy

The Nigerian mafia has a strong presence throughout Italy. Castel Volturno in Campania is considered the headquarters of the Nigerian mafia in Europe.[37] The country is used as a hub by the Nigerian mafia for the trafficking of cocaine from South America, heroin from Asia and women from Africa. Nigerian gangs have established partnerships with indigenous organised crime groups and have adopted the structure and operational methods of Italian crime syndicates.[38] The Nigerian mafia pays tribute (a percentage of its profits from criminal rackets) to the Camorra and Sicilian Mafia.[39] In Palermo, a group of drug dealers linked to the Neo-Black Movement were convicted as members of a "mafialike organization" in 2018.[40]

Japan

The Nigerian mafia in Tokyo engages in heroin dealing with the yakuza, the prostitution of Filipino women, money laundering, car theft and arranging fake marriages, amongst other crimes.[41] Following a number of incidents at Nigerian-owned bars in which patrons were drugged and robbed, the United States embassy in Japan issued a warning to US citizens to avoid certain bars and clubs in Roppongi.[42][43] Crimes committed by Nigerians are largely overlooked by Japanese police due to fear of being labelled racist by the Nigerian embassy which could cause a diplomatic incident.[44]

South Africa

Nigerian organised crime groups established roots in South Africa in the mid-1990s following the end of apartheid, and operate primarily in Johannesburg, Cape Town and Durban. Nigerians were initially involved in the crack cocaine trade, before moving into powder cocaine after establishing contacts in South America.[45] Hillbrow in Johannesburg was a stronghold for the Nigerian mafia for many years. After arriving in Cape Town, Nigerian syndicates operated drug and prostitution rackets in the affluent suburb of Sea Point before they were forced out by the police and neighbourhood watch. They subsequently moved onto the city's northern suburbs and dominate the Milnerton area.[38]

Thailand

Nigerian drug trafficking organisations began operating in Thailand as early as the late 1980s, using the nation as a base for trafficking heroin to other Asian countries, such as Hong Kong and Taiwan, and then onward to the United States and Europe.[46]

See also

General:

References

  1. ^ La Sorte, Mike. "Defining Organized Crime". AmericanMafia.com, May 2006.
  2. ^ People and Power. "The Nigerian Connection - People & Power". Al Jazeera. Retrieved 17 April 2014.
  3. ^ Ngwobo, Chris (July 2004). . This Present House. Freedom Hall. Archived from the original on 27 September 2007. Retrieved 4 March 2007.
  4. ^ Simon Heap,"Their Days are Spent in Gambling and Loafing, Pimping for Prostitutes, and Picking Pockets": Male Juvenile Delinquents on Lagos Island, Nigeria, 1920s-60s’, Journal of Family History, 35(1), 2010, 48-70; [1]
  5. ^ a b . NEWSfromAFRICA. Koinonia International. IRIN. 14 July 2005. Archived from the original on 19 May 2007. Retrieved 3 March 2007.
  6. ^ Momoh, Abubakar (2000). "Yoruba Culture and Area Boys in Lagos". In Jega, Attahiru (ed.). Identity Transformation and Identity Politics under Structural Adjustment in Nigeria. Nordic Africa Institute. p. 184. ISBN 91-7106-456-7.
  7. ^ Momoh, p. 193
  8. ^ a b Momoh, p. 195
  9. ^ "NBM official website". Retrieved 17 August 2020.
  10. ^ ""The Black Axe" - invstigation on the Neo-Black Movement´s international activities". Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. Retrieved 17 August 2020.
  11. ^ nbmarena.org
  12. ^ United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. . United Nations High Commission for Refugees. Archived from the original on 26 February 2014. Retrieved 17 April 2014.
  13. ^ Ibrahim, S. (2016). "Causes of socioeconomic cybercrime in Nigeria," In IEEE International Conference on Cybercrime and Computer Forensic (ICCCF), Vancouver, Canada, pp. 1-9,https://doi.org/10.1109/ICCCF.2016.7740439
  14. ^ Offiong 2003, 69–70
  15. ^ Offiong 2003, 70
  16. ^ http://www.krepublishers.com/02-Journals/T%20&%20T/T%20&%20T-07-0-000-09-Web/T%20&%20T-07-1-000-09-Abst-PDF/T&T-07-1-017-09-175-Egbochuku-E-O/T&T-07-1-017-09-175-Egbochuku-E-O-Tt.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  17. ^ Arresti in Campania per Black Axe, la mafia nigeriana
  18. ^ "GTA luxury vehicle thefts linked to Nigerian crime ring Black Axe". CBC News Toronto. 11 December 2015. Retrieved 18 January 2016.
  19. ^ Ross, Selena (17 January 2016). "GTA Sophisticated car theft ring targeting luxury vehicles". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved 18 January 2016.
  20. ^ "Mafia nigeriana sempre più potente, nasce l'asse con Cosa Nostra e camorra". Affaritaliani.it (in Italian). Retrieved 31 October 2019.
  21. ^ Lazarus, S., & Okolorie, G. U. (2019). The bifurcation of the Nigerian cybercriminals: Narratives of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) agents. Telematics and Informatics, 40, 14-26.https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tele.2019.04.009
  22. ^ "Advance Fee Scams".
  23. ^ Federal Bureau of Investigation. "Organized Crime: African Criminal Enterprises".
  24. ^ "National Drug Threat Assessment 2009 - Heroin". National Drug Intelligence Center, December 208. Retrieved 1 July 2010.
  25. ^ a b "Nigeria". . U.S. Department of State (14 June 2010).   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  26. ^ Ibrahim, S. (2016). Social and contextual taxonomy of cybercrime: Socioeconomic theory of Nigerian cybercriminals. International Journal of Law, Crime and Justice, 47, 44-57.https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijlcj.2016.07.002
  27. ^ "African Criminal Enterprises". FBI. Federal Bureau of Investigation. Retrieved 15 October 2015.
  28. ^ Shadowy Black Axe group leaves trail of tattered lives Selena Ross, The Globe and Mail (12 November 2015)
  29. ^ The Nigerian human trafficking mafia in Europe Bob Koigi, Fairplanet.org (18 March 2020)
  30. ^ Asian organized crime in the European Union Directorate-General for Internal Policies (2011)
  31. ^ How the 'Nigerian mafia' exploits African women in Europe Jan-Philipp Scholz and Andrea Lueg, Deutsche Welle (25 December 2019)
  32. ^ Ruthless and organised, Nigerians have become the biggest players in India's market for hard narcotics Sandeep Unnithan and Bhavna Vij-Aurora, India Today (30 November 1999)
  33. ^ Encyclopedia of White-Collar & Corporate Crime, Volume 1 Lawrence M. Salinger (2005)
  34. ^ Crime gangs trafficking children from Nigeria to Ireland for sex trade, says Europol Conor Gallagher, The Irish Times (19 October 2018)
  35. ^ Woman jailed for importing cannabis from SA The Irish Times (23 April 1999)
  36. ^ Nigerian gang linked to €15m fraud target of Garda raids Ken Foy, Irish Independent (7 September 2018)
  37. ^ In a ruined city on the Italian coast, the Nigerian mafia is muscling in on the old mob Emma Alberici and Giulia Sirignani, ABC News (16 March 2020)
  38. ^ a b Migration of the Nigerian mafia Carla Bernardo, University of Cape Town (16 May 2017)
  39. ^ A foreign mafia has come to Italy and further polarized the migration debate Chico Harlan and Stefano Pitrelli, The Washington Post (25 June 2019)
  40. ^ ""The Black Axe" - investigation on the Neo-Black Movement´s international activities". Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. 17 August 2020.
  41. ^ ‘Nigerian Mafia’ running wild in Kabukicho Amy Takahashi, Tokyo Reporter (29 January 2014)
  42. ^ "Trying to tame Tokyo's adult playground". Los Angeles Times. 26 January 2010.
  43. ^ Richard, Dreux, "Japan's Nigerians pay price for prosperity", The Japan Times, 19 July 2011, pp. 10-11.
  44. ^ Tokyo cops reluctant to crack down on foreign club touts over racism fears Amy Takahashi, Tokyo Reporter (7 January 2013)
  45. ^ The Nigerian drug mafia - in your suburb Anil Singh, Independent Online (15 October 2003)
  46. ^ Nigerians in Thailand: Two Sides to Every Story Jennifer L. Patin, ThailandRoad.com (25 July 2012)

Further reading

  • Stephen Ellis: This Present Darkness: A History of Nigerian Organised Crime. London: Hurst & Company, 2016. ISBN 978-0-19-049431-5.
  • Offiong, Daniel A. (2001). Secret Cults in Nigerian Tertiary Institutions. Enugu, Nigeria: Fourth Dimension Publishing Co. Ltd. ISBN 978-9781565922.
  • 419 African Mafia, in French, by Loulou Dédola, Lelio Bonaccorso and Claudio Naccari, éditions Ankama Editions, 2014, ISBN 978-2-35910-356-4 (nISSM)

External links

  • "The Black Axe" - investigation on the Neo-Black Movement´s international activities
  • nbmarena.com Official Website
  • Video: African Prostitution In Europe, Nigerian Connection
  • Women trafficking from Benin City
  • Nigerian fraud rings in the Netherlands
  • Nigerian fraud ring in Spain
  • Nigerian fraud ring in the USA
  • Nigerian fraud ring in Los Angeles
  • /wikisozo.com
  • newsrescue.com
  • campuscults.net
  • unhcr.org
  • naijagists.com
  • nigerianmuse.com
  • "Nigeria's Cults and their Role in the Niger Delta Insurgency" by Bestman Wellington, The Jamestown Foundation, 6 July 2007
  • 419 Scams: Nigerian 419 Scams—an practical overview
  • "Fraud Ring Uncovered in Nigeria". BBC News, 6 September 2007.
  • "UK Police in Nigerian Scam Haul". BBC News, 4 October 2007.
  • Last, Alex. "Anger Over Nigeria's Gang Blitz". BBC News, 4 October 2007.
  • articolotre.com
  • "Black Axe utmanade maffian – nu på plats i Göteborg". Göteborgs-Posten. 22 July 2019. Retrieved 22 July 2019.

organised, crime, nigeria, main, article, crime, nigeria, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, news. Main article Crime in Nigeria This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Organised crime in Nigeria news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Organised crime in Nigeria includes activities by fraudsters bandits such as looting and kidnappings on major highways drug traffickers and racketeers which have spread across Western Africa Nigerian criminal gangs rose to prominence in the 1980s owing much to the globalisation of the world s economies and the high level of lawlessness and corruption in the country citation needed Contents 1 Structure 1 1 Area Boys 1 2 Confraternities 2 Activities 2 1 Fraud 2 2 Drug trafficking 2 3 Human trafficking and kidnappings 3 Impact 4 Nigerian organised crime in other countries 4 1 Canada 4 2 France 4 3 Germany 4 4 India 4 5 Ireland 4 6 Italy 4 7 Japan 4 8 South Africa 4 9 Thailand 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksStructure EditThis article is written like a personal reflection personal essay or argumentative essay that states a Wikipedia editor s personal feelings or presents an original argument about a topic Please help improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Crime organisations in Nigeria typically do not follow the mafia type model followed by other groups citation needed They appear to be less formal and more organised along familial and ethnic lines thus making them less susceptible by infiltration from law enforcement Police investigations are further hampered by the fact there are at least 250 distinct ethnic languages in Nigeria Other criminal gangs from Nigeria appear to be smaller scale freelance operations 1 Groups from Benin City are especially notorious for human trafficking 2 Area Boys Edit Further information Area boys Area Boys also known as Agberos 3 are loosely organised gangs of street children and teenagers composed mostly of males who roam the streets of Lagos Lagos State in Nigeria 4 They extort money from passers by public transporters and traders sell illegal drugs act as informal security guards and perform other odd jobs in return for compensation 5 6 One of the methods Area Boys use for extortion is to surround pedestrians drivers and passengers in vehicles which are stuck in traffic and force them to pay for some actual or fictitious service before letting them go 5 To aid in collecting money during traffic jams the area boys place nails in the road and dig up the streets 7 Among the Area Boys are both sellers and users of illegal drugs 8 A study states most of them use drugs cocaine heroin marijuana etc either as occasional users or addicts or as peddlers Of 77 respondents to a survey 12 2 dealt drugs while 60 3 were addicts themselves Sale of drugs takes place both in Nigeria and abroad and sales abroad have earned a small percentage of the sellers significant amounts of money 8 Confraternities Edit Further information Confraternities in Nigeria The Neo Black Movement often claim to be entirely unrelated to Black Axe in public statements however the symbol is shown on their posters Highly organised Nigerian confraternities campus gangs operate worldwide For example the Neo Black Movement of Africa In its own words the Neo Black Movement of Africa is a registered non partisan non religious and non tribal organisation that sincerely seek to revive retain and modify where necessary those aspects of African culture that would provide vehicles of progress for Africa and her peoples 9 Nonetheless law enforcement officials who have investigated members in recent years for example in Canada the UK and Italy are convinced that the movement has strayed far from its original path 10 Behind the welfare facade of the Neo Black Movement 11 hides indeed the most dreaded Nigerian campus cult the Black Axe confraternity 12 NBM usually state that they are not identical with Black Axe for propaganda purposes While the atrocities committed by campus cult members are well known very little is known about other activities of the Neo Black Movement 13 Offiong claims that the group s initial goal of promoting Black Consciousness and fighting for the dignity of Africans and their freedom from neo colonialism has deteriorated into self serving behaviour that is notoriously and brutally violent 14 He maintains that violence has in fact become the cult s official policy 15 Apart from the atrocities in the orbit of NBM most members of the confraternity are involved in fraud and cyber crime The main reason to join the confraternity is besides the pressure and intimidation 16 that is applied to students to join the fact that the confraternity has infiltrated all spheres of Nigerian society and serves the main purpose of helping its members climb the career ladder and going unpunished for their crimes by means of their nepotistic structure Investigations and a number of arrests of members of NBM by the Italian police brought to light various crimes committed by members of NBM NBM and other cults were found guilty of smuggling of drugs extortion 419 fraud prostitution passport falsification and cloning of credit cards citation needed In 2011 eight more members of NBM were arrested in Italy for the same offences mentioned above They are referred to as an international criminal organisation and Nigerian Mafia 17 According to internal documents the confraternity helps members to immigrate illegally to Europe Nigerian fraud rings have been exported to Europe America and Asia see external links section In 2015 a sophisticated car theft ring run by the Black Axe organised crime ring was busted in Toronto Canada The ring had stolen more than 500 luxury cars in one year valued at 30 million US dollars 18 19 According to the police the Nigerians are increasing their alliances with the Neapolitan Camorra and the Sicilian Mafia the alliances are most regarded to prostitution drugs and human trafficking business 20 Activities EditFraud Edit Further information Advance fee scam An advance fee scam is a form of fraud and one of the most common types of confidence tricks 21 The scam typically involves promising the victim a significant share of a large sum of money in return for a small up front payment which the fraudster requires in order to obtain the large sum If a victim makes the payment the fraudster either invents a series of further fees for the victim or simply disappears 22 Drug trafficking Edit Nigerian criminal groups are heavily involved in drug trafficking shipping heroin from Asian countries to Europe and America and cocaine from South America to Europe and South Africa citation needed The large numbers of ethnic Nigerians in countries like India and Thailand give their gangs ready access to around 90 of the world s heroin 23 In the United States Nigerian drug traffickers are important distributors of heroin from importing it into the country to distribution level and selling it to lower level street gangs 24 These criminal groups are also known to launder drug money through domestic football clubs in the Nigeria Premier League and are rumoured to make additional money through match fixing activity within football matches Human trafficking and kidnappings Edit Further information Human trafficking in Nigeria Nigeria is a source transit and destination country for women and children subjected to trafficking in persons including forced labour and forced prostitution There is a huge menace of Kidnappings on Northern Highways as well as allover Nigeria claims to be from Fulani Bandits Trafficked Nigerian women and children are recruited from rural areas within Nigeria women and girls for involuntary domestic servitude and sexual exploitation and boys for forced labour in street vending domestic servitude mining and begging 25 Nigerian women and children are taken from Nigeria to other West and Central African countries primarily Gabon Cameroon Ghana Chad Benin Togo Niger Burkina Faso and the Gambia for the same purposes Children from West African states like Benin Togo and Ghana where Economic Community of West African States ECOWAS rules allow for easy entry are also forced to work in Nigeria and some are subjected to hazardous jobs in Nigeria s granite mines Nigerian women and girls are taken to Europe especially to Italy and Russia and to the Middle East and North Africa for forced prostitution 25 Impact EditAccording to the FBI Nigerian criminal enterprises are the most notable of all African criminal enterprises They are considered to be among the most aggressive and expansionist international criminal groups operating in more than 80 countries of the world and are established on all populated continents of the world 26 Their most profitable activity is drug trafficking though they are more famous for their financial fraud which costs the US alone approximately US 1 to 2 billion annually 27 citation needed Nigerian organised crime in other countries EditCanada Edit See also Nigerians in Canada Police in Toronto became aware of the presence of the Black Axe gang in 2013 The gang exerts influence over Canada s Nigerian expatriate community and is predominantly involved in scamming Authorities estimate the Black Axe s membership in the country at approximately two hundred 28 France Edit The Nigerian mafia in France is involved in the sex trafficking of Nigerian women and girls 29 as well as heroin trafficking in which they have collaborated with Chinese triads and other groups 30 Germany Edit The Nigerian mafia is responsible for the smuggling and pimping of the majority of the African women working as prostitutes in Germany 31 India Edit See also Nigerians in India Nigerians are among the major players in the narcotics trade in Goa and Mumbai The coast of north Goa provides an entry point of South American cocaine for Nigerian traffickers who have come into conflict with Indian gangs 32 Ireland Edit See also Nigerians in Ireland Nigerian dealers are credited with introducing crack cocaine to Ireland in the early 2000s 33 Europol have identified Nigerian organised crime gangs as being responsible for trafficking children from Nigeria to Ireland for work in the sex trade 34 Nigerian gangs are also involved in the cannabis trade using contacts in South Africa to smuggle the drugs into Ireland via couriers and through parcels 35 as well as in fraud and money laundering rings 36 Italy Edit See also Nigerians in Italy The Nigerian mafia has a strong presence throughout Italy Castel Volturno in Campania is considered the headquarters of the Nigerian mafia in Europe 37 The country is used as a hub by the Nigerian mafia for the trafficking of cocaine from South America heroin from Asia and women from Africa Nigerian gangs have established partnerships with indigenous organised crime groups and have adopted the structure and operational methods of Italian crime syndicates 38 The Nigerian mafia pays tribute a percentage of its profits from criminal rackets to the Camorra and Sicilian Mafia 39 In Palermo a group of drug dealers linked to the Neo Black Movement were convicted as members of a mafialike organization in 2018 40 Japan Edit See also Nigerians in Japan The Nigerian mafia in Tokyo engages in heroin dealing with the yakuza the prostitution of Filipino women money laundering car theft and arranging fake marriages amongst other crimes 41 Following a number of incidents at Nigerian owned bars in which patrons were drugged and robbed the United States embassy in Japan issued a warning to US citizens to avoid certain bars and clubs in Roppongi 42 43 Crimes committed by Nigerians are largely overlooked by Japanese police due to fear of being labelled racist by the Nigerian embassy which could cause a diplomatic incident 44 South Africa Edit Nigerian organised crime groups established roots in South Africa in the mid 1990s following the end of apartheid and operate primarily in Johannesburg Cape Town and Durban Nigerians were initially involved in the crack cocaine trade before moving into powder cocaine after establishing contacts in South America 45 Hillbrow in Johannesburg was a stronghold for the Nigerian mafia for many years After arriving in Cape Town Nigerian syndicates operated drug and prostitution rackets in the affluent suburb of Sea Point before they were forced out by the police and neighbourhood watch They subsequently moved onto the city s northern suburbs and dominate the Milnerton area 38 Thailand Edit Nigerian drug trafficking organisations began operating in Thailand as early as the late 1980s using the nation as a base for trafficking heroin to other Asian countries such as Hong Kong and Taiwan and then onward to the United States and Europe 46 See also EditObafemi Awolowo University massacreGeneral Crime in NigeriaReferences Edit La Sorte Mike Defining Organized Crime AmericanMafia com May 2006 People and Power The Nigerian Connection People amp Power Al Jazeera Retrieved 17 April 2014 Ngwobo Chris July 2004 Area Boys Menace to Society This Present House Freedom Hall Archived from the original on 27 September 2007 Retrieved 4 March 2007 Simon Heap Their Days are Spent in Gambling and Loafing Pimping for Prostitutes and Picking Pockets Male Juvenile Delinquents on Lagos Island Nigeria 1920s 60s Journal of Family History 35 1 2010 48 70 1 a b Area Boys a growing menace on the streets of Lagos NEWSfromAFRICA Koinonia International IRIN 14 July 2005 Archived from the original on 19 May 2007 Retrieved 3 March 2007 Momoh Abubakar 2000 Yoruba Culture and Area Boys in Lagos In Jega Attahiru ed Identity Transformation and Identity Politics under Structural Adjustment in Nigeria Nordic Africa Institute p 184 ISBN 91 7106 456 7 Momoh p 193 a b Momoh p 195 NBM official website Retrieved 17 August 2020 The Black Axe invstigation on the Neo Black Movement s international activities Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung Retrieved 17 August 2020 nbmarena org United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Refworld Nigeria The Black Axe confraternity also known as the Neo Black Movement of Africa including their rituals oaths of secrecy and use of symbols or particular signs whether they use force to recruit individuals 2009 November 2012 United Nations High Commission for Refugees Archived from the original on 26 February 2014 Retrieved 17 April 2014 Ibrahim S 2016 Causes of socioeconomic cybercrime in Nigeria In IEEE International Conference on Cybercrime and Computer Forensic ICCCF Vancouver Canada pp 1 9 https doi org 10 1109 ICCCF 2016 7740439 Offiong 2003 69 70 Offiong 2003 70 http www krepublishers com 02 Journals T 20 amp 20T T 20 amp 20T 07 0 000 09 Web T 20 amp 20T 07 1 000 09 Abst PDF T amp T 07 1 017 09 175 Egbochuku E O T amp T 07 1 017 09 175 Egbochuku E O Tt pdf bare URL PDF Arresti in Campania per Black Axe la mafia nigeriana GTA luxury vehicle thefts linked to Nigerian crime ring Black Axe CBC News Toronto 11 December 2015 Retrieved 18 January 2016 Ross Selena 17 January 2016 GTA Sophisticated car theft ring targeting luxury vehicles The Globe and Mail Retrieved 18 January 2016 Mafia nigeriana sempre piu potente nasce l asse con Cosa Nostra e camorra Affaritaliani it in Italian Retrieved 31 October 2019 Lazarus S amp Okolorie G U 2019 The bifurcation of the Nigerian cybercriminals Narratives of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission EFCC agents Telematics and Informatics 40 14 26 https doi org 10 1016 j tele 2019 04 009 Advance Fee Scams Federal Bureau of Investigation Organized Crime African Criminal Enterprises National Drug Threat Assessment 2009 Heroin National Drug Intelligence Center December 208 Retrieved 1 July 2010 a b Nigeria Trafficking in Persons Report 2010 U S Department of State 14 June 2010 This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Ibrahim S 2016 Social and contextual taxonomy of cybercrime Socioeconomic theory of Nigerian cybercriminals International Journal of Law Crime and Justice 47 44 57 https doi org 10 1016 j ijlcj 2016 07 002 African Criminal Enterprises FBI Federal Bureau of Investigation Retrieved 15 October 2015 Shadowy Black Axe group leaves trail of tattered lives Selena Ross The Globe and Mail 12 November 2015 The Nigerian human trafficking mafia in Europe Bob Koigi Fairplanet org 18 March 2020 Asian organized crime in the European Union Directorate General for Internal Policies 2011 How the Nigerian mafia exploits African women in Europe Jan Philipp Scholz and Andrea Lueg Deutsche Welle 25 December 2019 Ruthless and organised Nigerians have become the biggest players in India s market for hard narcotics Sandeep Unnithan and Bhavna Vij Aurora India Today 30 November 1999 Encyclopedia of White Collar amp Corporate Crime Volume 1 Lawrence M Salinger 2005 Crime gangs trafficking children from Nigeria to Ireland for sex trade says Europol Conor Gallagher The Irish Times 19 October 2018 Woman jailed for importing cannabis from SA The Irish Times 23 April 1999 Nigerian gang linked to 15m fraud target of Garda raids Ken Foy Irish Independent 7 September 2018 In a ruined city on the Italian coast the Nigerian mafia is muscling in on the old mob Emma Alberici and Giulia Sirignani ABC News 16 March 2020 a b Migration of the Nigerian mafia Carla Bernardo University of Cape Town 16 May 2017 A foreign mafia has come to Italy and further polarized the migration debate Chico Harlan and Stefano Pitrelli The Washington Post 25 June 2019 The Black Axe investigation on the Neo Black Movement s international activities Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung 17 August 2020 Nigerian Mafia running wild in Kabukicho Amy Takahashi Tokyo Reporter 29 January 2014 Trying to tame Tokyo s adult playground Los Angeles Times 26 January 2010 Richard Dreux Japan s Nigerians pay price for prosperity The Japan Times 19 July 2011 pp 10 11 Tokyo cops reluctant to crack down on foreign club touts over racism fears Amy Takahashi Tokyo Reporter 7 January 2013 The Nigerian drug mafia in your suburb Anil Singh Independent Online 15 October 2003 Nigerians in Thailand Two Sides to Every Story Jennifer L Patin ThailandRoad com 25 July 2012 Further reading EditStephen Ellis This Present Darkness A History of Nigerian Organised Crime London Hurst amp Company 2016 ISBN 978 0 19 049431 5 Offiong Daniel A 2001 Secret Cults in Nigerian Tertiary Institutions Enugu Nigeria Fourth Dimension Publishing Co Ltd ISBN 978 9781565922 419 African Mafia in French by Loulou Dedola Lelio Bonaccorso and Claudio Naccari editions Ankama Editions 2014 ISBN 978 2 35910 356 4 nISSM External links Edit The Black Axe investigation on the Neo Black Movement s international activities nbmarena com Official Website Video African Prostitution In Europe Nigerian Connection Women trafficking from Benin City Nigerian fraud rings in the Netherlands Nigerian fraud ring in Spain Nigerian fraud ring in the USA Nigerian fraud ring in Los Angeles wikisozo com newsrescue com campuscults net unhcr org naijagists com nigerianmuse com nigerianobservernews com Nigeria s Cults and their Role in the Niger Delta Insurgency by Bestman Wellington The Jamestown Foundation 6 July 2007 419 Scams Nigerian 419 Scams an practical overview Fraud Ring Uncovered in Nigeria BBC News 6 September 2007 UK Police in Nigerian Scam Haul BBC News 4 October 2007 Last Alex Anger Over Nigeria s Gang Blitz BBC News 4 October 2007 articolotre com Black Axe utmanade maffian nu pa plats i Goteborg Goteborgs Posten 22 July 2019 Retrieved 22 July 2019 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Organised crime in Nigeria amp oldid 1148369854, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.