Baby Factories -- Part 1
Last week in Nigeria (https://www.thisdaylive.com/index.php/2022/07/19/the-menace-of-baby-factories/) Delta State Police Command arrested 2 men and rescued 3 pregnant women from a baby factory.
“Impregnated girls are held captive until they give birth,” according to This Day Live (https://www.thisdaylive.com/index.php/2022/07/19/the-menace-of-baby-factories/), “and [are] compelled to give up their babies for money. This illicit trade is part of an international ring in human slavery and organ trafficking…
“Syndicates also scout for young and impoverished females with unwanted pregnancies to lure them to many of the so-called homes and orphanages where they are kept until they are delivered of their babies which they then buy.
"In some cases, young men are brought into the homes to impregnate these girls for fees…for the purpose of producing children that will be taken away from them. These children are then traded almost like commodities.”
This is happening in Nigeria—and if you think it only happens “there” and not “here,” think again.
Baby Factories -- Part 2
A baby trafficking ring (https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jan/08/the-baby-selling-scheme-poor-pregnant-marshall-islands-women-lured-to-the-us) operated for years between the US and the Marshall Islands.
Paul Petersen, a US citizen and former elected county official in Arizona, lured pregnant women from the Marshall Islands to the US where he placed their babies with innocent families who thought it was a legitimate adoption agency.
Petersen paid the women $10,000 for their babies and sold them to unknowing families for $40,000.
He was sentenced to six years in prison and faces further jail time on additional charges.
Babies are sold for other reasons too, of course. Like satanic ritual abuse (SRA) and child sacrifice (https://t.me/JusticeReporterChannel/1451?single):
“There are genuine orphanages doing wonderful work for the society in this regard,” reiterated This Day Live. “However, as…adoption…assumes a new level of popularity in Nigeria with the number of potential adopters far exceeding what the legal orphanages could offer, there has been an equal rise in the mushrooming of all manner of motherless babies’ homes. In the process, we now have orphanages, which in a desperate quest for quick money, sell babies, even to known ritualists.
"These children are then traded almost like commodities."
How long will we allow our children to be the currency of darkness?
#CrimesAgainstChildren
Why the eye-rolling emojis? Are you skeptical?
Absolutely not..!!