In a dimly lit detention cell at the Special Anti-Touting Squad (SASA) office in Onitsha, Vincent Mbam, 57, and his wife, Nnenna, 39, recount a story of desperation that has shocked a nation already grappling with endemic poverty and child trafficking. The couple, natives of Ebonyi State but residing in Anambra, allegedly sold two of their six children—a decision they attribute to crushing financial strain and cultural pressures. Their case, however, is not an anomaly but a symptom of a deeper crisis plaguing Nigeria’s socio-economic fabric .
The Mbams’ ordeal began in 2019 when, faced with eviction, hunger, and threats from Nnenna’s family over unpaid bride price, they sold their male child for ₦400,000.
Vincent, explained: “My in-laws threatened to take my wife and children. I had no choice but to sell my son to pay the bride price and keep my family intact.” The money, he claimed, was used to formalize their marriage and buy household essentials. By December 2024, after the birth of their sixth child—a daughter—they sold her for ₦1.7 million, though Vincent refused to disclose how the larger sum was spent.
Nnenna’s account, however, reveals marital discord beneath the surface. She corroborated her husband’s story but accused him of withholding funds: “He gave me only ₦100,000. If he had managed the money better, no one would have suspected us.” Their conflicting narratives highlight not just poverty, but the erosion of trust within families under financial duress .
The couple’s arrest followed a tip-off from a concerned neighbor, a rare intervention in a society where child trafficking often goes unreported. Anambra’s SASA personnel detained the Mbams in Upper Iweka, a bustling transit hub notorious for illicit activities. Yet, their case underscores the absence of robust social welfare systems.
While Anambra’s Women Affairs Commissioner, Ify Obinabo, has vowed to prosecute traffickers, critics argue that arrests alone cannot address root causes. The National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP) reports that child trafficking exposes victims to forced labor, sexual exploitation, and trauma—a reality underscored by the 34 children rescued in Ogun State in 2021 and the 21 minors intercepted in Kaduna .
