Cynthia
 recounts her story: “I had problems back in Nigeria, family problems.” 
Cynthia says. “My aunties, well, a woman I was so close to in my village
 I called her auntie, said her brother ran a pharmacy in Italy and he 
needed a girl to help him there.” 
 
“Straight away I asked her if 
it was prostitution,” she remembers, “but she took me in like her own 
daughter, and we were so close, so when she said if it was prostitution,
 I wouldn’t let you go, I believed her.” 
 
 
“She was lying. When I 
got to Libya, the boga –a man– told me I wouldn’t be working in a 
pharmacy, but that I was going to be a prostitute.” Cynthia says. “I 
cried all through the night, but I could not go back, I could only move 
forward to Italy.” 
 
“When I arrived on 25 June, 2016, they 
transferred me to [a hotspot in] Trappani for a week, then to a camp in 
Reggio Calabria. There a woman gave me a telephone to call my auntie.” 
She says. “I said, ‘I’m here.’ And then that phone that I used was 
ringing all the time, a woman was calling to arrange for a man to come 
and get me out of the camp.” 
 
“One day, a man came to get me. We 
waited in a supermarket, and another man came who drove me somewhere in 
Sicily. I don’t know where it was, but when we got there, they took me 
to the woman I spoke to on the phone. She gave me a bed, and in the 
morning she woke me up and said she works with my auntie, and that now I
 was her prostitute.” 
 
“I argued and fought with her all day until the night. Then
 she took me into her bedroom and she cut my wrist and collected my 
blood. She took pieces of my hair, and took my menstruation pad and put 
it all into a bag. She said if I go away from her, she will take my 
blood to Nigeria and use Juju to poison my blood.” 
 “The next day, we took a train to Calabria, and the woman gave me the things I need to work - panties, a bra, and condoms,”
 Cynthia remembers, “She told me I owed her €30,000 for the trip and I 
was going to work to pay it off. I told her the trip wasn’t that much, 
but she said ’That’s not my concern and if I ran to the police they 
would deport me.” 
 
“I was scared of her, of the police, of everything, so I agree,” she says. 
 
“I
 saw the man who took me from the camp again, and he took me to the 
place I would be working. We called it Lentini, and was a road between 
that town and Catania. It was just a road in the bush, with so many 
girls working on it.” 
 “He said I needed to change my clothes 
and into the underwear they gave me, and if a car came, I had to take 
the driver into the bush for sex.” Cynthia says. “In the bushes and on 
the small roads there were beds, he said.” 
 
“I worked from 
morning until the nighttime. I can’t remember how many men I was with, 
but it was a lot. When I got back to the house I was crying and I told 
the madam I wanted to call my parents, but she said no and demanded the 
money I had made.” 
 
“I did the same thing every day in June, 
July, August, September, and October. In October, in the early morning, 
the police came to the door and knocked and shouted ‘Open up!’ The madam
 was running everywhere and she locked me and some other girls in the 
bedroom. I hid in the bath, and the police took the other girls and the 
madam.” 
 
“Eventually I followed them to the police though, because I spoke to one of the girls and she said it was okay.” 
 
Cynthia
 was transferred to the safe house for women who are victims of sex 
trafficking where she awaits her paperwork to be processed. 
 
“I’m 
hoping that the government helps me with my documents, and that I can 
find a job. That’s my only way out of this. I’ll be okay and earning 
money and sending it home to my family. I would finally be happy because
 my family would be happy.” 
 
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