Elomoko said the rescued women and girls told officers that they were each offered 100,000 naira ($632, 466 euros) to sell their babies after delivery. An investigation was also underway over a case of a missing baby from the illegal home. "We found out that the suspect could not explain the whereabouts of a baby that was recently delivered in the home," the spokeswoman said. "We are suspecting that the baby might have been sold for (black magic) rituals," she said, adding that the suspect would be taken to court after police investigation. Nigerian security agents have uncovered a series of alleged baby factories in recent years, notably in the south-eastern part of the country. Last month, six pregnant teenage girls were freed in a raid on an illegal clinic in the oil city of Port Harcourt. Human trafficking is widespread in West Africa, where children are bought from their families to work in plantations, mines and factories or as domestic help. Others are sold into prostitution, and less commonly they are tortured or sacrificed in black magic.
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