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Teenage mules caught in Ghana

posted Friday, 13 July 2007

Girls being girls?

News that two 16-year old girls of British citizenship but of foreign descent were arrested in Ghana for attempting to traffic cocaine to Britain has been greeted with interest and interesting commentary.

However, before we get carried away on the deception of the moment we need to examine this case deeper than the superficial.

The words of the girls are a damning indictment of either the youth in general or the circle of friends that these girls might keep and none of it is good.

The words

"There were basically two boys over here who gave us two bags and told us ... it was an empty bag.

"We never thought anything bad was inside ... and they told us to go to the UK and drop it off to some boy ... at the airport."

"It was basically like a set-up. They didn't tell us nothing, we didn't think nothing, because basically we are innocent.

"We don't know nothing about this drugs and stuff."

Having the time of their lives

Now these are two girls of 16 who were offered £3,000 to travel to Ghana, their accommodation was paid for by two Ghanaian men who presumably then gave them two "empty" laptop bags with £300,000 of cocaine to carry through Ghanaian customs and then U.K. customs to give to some other boy in the U.K. - 5% tops investment to cart the goods to the market.

These girls were having the time of their lives as they dreamed of what they would do with £3,000 where many know the price of everything but the value of nothing.

Anyone who has finished secondary school and is about to start A-Levels should have been aware in some way that West Africa was now the drop-off point for mules to bring drugs into Europe - in fact, some of this was in the news only too recently, if the youth could ever deign to be weaned off their PlayStations and iPods to find out what is going on in their world.

The protestations recorded on the phone of their innocence are bunkum for all I care, innocent, my foot; these girls were willing to take large sums of money, deceive their guardians or parents that they were off to France when they were really off to Ghana and they cared nothing for the fact that they might have ended up in the hands of even more unscrupulous people who could have sexually abused them amongst other unprintable things.

Confide and confidence

One would expect when children of that age are met with such serious situations, they would intimate their parents or relations who should be close enough to confide in about what could turn out really nasty.

Their language of expression was appalling to say the least, double negatives do not make positives in English language - in place of 'nothing' they should have used 'anything', if they could ever muster any sensible expression in their distress.

One cannot say if the girls were just plain naïve or exercising brazen bravado in willingly allowing themselves to be used in this rotten scheme and deception.

If they succeeded

But one thing is clear, if these girls had succeeded they would have had to explain to their parents where they got money for their new kit from - more lies, how their passports got to have visa stamps of Ghana - even more lies, they might have persuaded other colleagues and friends to get involved in this racket and they probably would have repeated the unassuming offence again and again.

Meanwhile, all the boys - the givers and the collectors would have now gone to ground without an iota of conscience for the trouble they have gotten the girls into - that is business; an occupational hazard for them and lives destroyed for the girls.

Let me correct that, it was the love of money, the root of all evil that consumed the girls that they allowed themselves to be easily deceived and lured into this deception of their parents to acquire unwarranted riches.

Raising kids properly

What do kids get taught at school today? No dignity in labour, no honesty in the acquisition of wealth, no knowledge of ensuring that the art of making money should be transparent, above board, auditable and worthy of example. Am I being just utterly old-fashioned here?

One does feel a tinge of sympathy for the girls, but the fact that they were caught would hopefully alert others to the danger of this get-rich-quick scheme.

Meanwhile the girls, who were told nothing, thought nothing and knew nothing would be on a crash course of learning something pretty damn quickly - never trust men who offer you riches for "nothing".

 

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1. Chxta left...
Saturday, 14 July 2007 12:48 am :: http://chxta.blogspot.com

The celebrity culture, don't we just love it? No one wants to work anymore, and no one wants to even understand the value of a decent day's labour. All fuelled by the media's increasing obsession with celebrity (whatever that means) and all its trappings.


2. ijebuman left...
Monday, 16 July 2007 11:45 am :: http://naijaman.cfmxdeveloper.co.uk/diar

"double negatives do not make positives in English language - in place of 'nothing' they should have used 'anything'."

LOL. Considering the mess they are in, their language is the least of their problems right now. Really sad to hear that one of the girls is Nigerian...


3. ola left...
Tuesday, 31 July 2007 10:58 pm

I can only say in particular about Yatunde Diya whose parents are from Nigeria ... with no good foundation. Because how would my daughter tell me she is going for school trip and I will not have a confirmation letter from the school or a telephone number of the hotel or anything from her before she leaves for the trip ... or who paid for the trip? ... There are so many questions I need to ask her parent if i am chanced ... so many parents do not have time for their children all they know is to work and do loads of over time at work not bothering to know what their children have done during the day.


4. Paul left...
Wednesday, 8 August 2007 10:49 am

I think Akin's has highlighted some good points in his article. Similarly I don't believe a word of the girls story either. They have found themselves in a serious state of affairs and it is entirely of their own making.

Let them explain themselves in court starting with how they found themselves in Ghana when they should have been in France.

If they cooperate fully with the Ghananian authorities with luck they may get a few years and learn from their terrible mistake. If they persist with the fanciful story of meeting two nameless boys then I'd show no mercy.


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