Abuja, 28 August, 2025 / 9:20 pm (ACI Africa).
A Nigerian Catholic Priest has described the growing trafficking of secondary school children across the country as “a national emergency” that requires urgent and coordinated action from government institutions, faith leaders, schools, and families.
Speaking to ACI Africa on Monday, August 25, on the sidelines of a thanksgiving Mass marking his 40th Priestly ordination anniversary, Fr. George Ehusani warned that the trend poses a threat to the future of children in the West African nation.
“This is a national emergency. We are dealing with a crisis that threatens the future of our children and the soul of our nation. When teenagers who should be in classrooms are lured, moved, and exploited by criminal networks, the entire community is diminished,” Fr. Ehusani told ACI Africa.
The Executive Director of the Lux Terra Leadership Foundation said he had received reports from educators, Parish workers, and community volunteers showing a troubling pattern in which traffickers target adolescents during and after school hours, often through acquaintances or intermediaries on social media.
“The traffickers are not ghosts. They are people who understand the vulnerabilities of our young ones. They promise scholarships, jobs, modeling opportunities, or travel. By the time parents and teachers discover the truth, the damage is done,” Fr. Ehusani told ACI Africa during the August 25 interview.






