Kuramo Beach on Lagos Island fell to ocean fury and the rage of the
Lagos State government in 2012. The state government had closed down the
popular beach, following the confirmation that the known relaxation
spot and a tourist site, had morphed into a danger zone where nefarious
activities like prostitution and crime throve.However, after that clampdown, hundreds of the prostitutes, drug
peddlers and other criminal elements that previously operated in Kuramo
Beach migrated to Lekki and set up businesses near the Lekki Beach.
They ‘invaded’ a neighbourhood, an expanse of land beside Alhaji Lateef
Jakande Low Cost Housing Estate, located on Beach Gate Road. This road
leads to the Lekki Beach from Jakande Second Gate.
This is a
thoroughfare into other four communities: Igbara, Maiyegun, Aro and
Ologolo.
This neighbourhood, Saturday Expdonaloaded blog gathered, used to be an
open place, after what was known as the Artists Village there was
demolished by the government. A few of the evicted residents of Kuramo
Island came there and asked to be given space to erect make-shift
shelters while they sorted out their lives. The omo onile (land
owners) saw their request as a source of business, and then rented a
small space to them for about N10,000. That was how they built the
lounges seen along the beach road.
The omo oniles gave an inch, but these ‘investors’ took
miles, as they turned the locale into a modern day Sodom and Gomorrah,
and even named their new base ‘Small Kuramo’. Now immoral and criminal
activities that lead to the demolition of Kuramo Beach now flourish in
this neighbourhood. And this has changed this community from a normal
residential environment to a territory where drugs and sex are the
major articles of trade.
Walking down Beach Gate Road from Jakande Roundabout in the daytime,
Small Kuramo, appears like any other Lagos ghetto. Shanties dot both
sides of the road, most of which are bars and eateries. A lounge in New
Kuramo is a makeshift structure constructed with wood. The proprietor of
the lounge would build a bar at the foreground, displaying assorted
drinks. There is also a sound system with huge outdoor speakers from
which music blasts. Electric bulbs of exotic colours and other kinds of
fancy lights, hang in front of the lounges small proprietors. They or
their agents sit in front of the lounges to sell food and drink. They
also use that to monitor the number of guests their occupants have, so
that there would be no excuses when it is time to collect the sum the
red light ladies are expected to pay daily.
Saturday Expdonaloaded blog learnt that the red light ladies pay between
N700 and N1000 daily as rent, depending on how new or old the lounge is,
or where the lounge is situated. Small Kuramo has two main phases-
Phase One and Phase Two. Accommodation at the Phase One area of Small
Kuramo is cheaper. This is because this area is known for seediness,
and has been designated to be an area for individuals with less class
and low taste. Phase Two is like the capitol of Small Kuramo. There are
newer shanties here, and it is labelled to be for people with class,
according to one of the patrons, “people with swag.” Outside this
abstract factor, nothing much differentiates the lounges in Phase One
and Two.
Each lounge has a bar. And after the bar, one heads into ‘rooms’
lined up on both sides of the narrow corridor. Each lounge has nothing
less than 10 small cabins. Each of them measures about six feet by five
and all that the room can take is a small, flattened, worn-out
two-by-six mattress. To enter the room, one would have to squeeze
through the partially open door because the narrow bed has taken up most
of the space. The room has a very small window, and the fan that
dangles above the bed can do little to diffuse the unpleasant odour that
hangs in room like devil’s fart.
In Small Kuramo, as soon as the sun goes down, and darkness envelopes
the earth, coloured bulbs begin to shine as the whole vicinity turns
into a mélange of miscreants, hoodlums and prostitutes. Sex and lewd
lifestyle are enthroned in the locale, drug dealers begin brisk
business, as scores of sew workers of different shapes and sizes begin
to troop out in skimpy attires.
Although the sex trade occurs on both sides of the road, the real hub
is on the left hand side as one heads towards Lekki Beach. Behind the
row of buildings beside the main road is where the real sexual
escapades occur at night. Some dark walkways lead to the back buildings
where the red light women line up and make all manner of suggestive
comments and gestures as a man approaches.
The back buildings are where the real action is. This place is
another world on its own. When this reporter went there, young men and
women were displaying suggestive dance steps like possessed beings.
Many of these dancers seem to be dancing under the influence of alcohol
or probably some hard drugs. The smell of marijuana was strong
everywhere and at every corner. Scantily dressed ladies hiss at men
that throws a gaze at them; calling on potential customers to come in
for some raunchy sex.
Competition for customers is often stiff among the scarlet ladies. In
Small Kuramo they don’t only compete with each other to make the most
money. But every sex worker competes with herself also. It is a rat race
to find customers that would pay up, so that they would raise N1000 to
pay their rent, buy illicit drugs and alcohols, feed and clothes
themselves, save for their future and also send money back to families.
With these pressures hanging on their neck, many of them are very
willing to offer cheap sex.
Timing and the perceived influx of customers are major factors that
influence price of sex. During weekends, and peak hours which is usually
between 8pm till midnight, a round of sex could be got for N1000, while
N2000 or N3000 is charged for an all-night sexual rendezvous. Older
ladies or less attractive girls could accept lesser demanding on one’s
ability to bargain for sex. But when the market gets dull from around
2am or 3am, sex workers that are yet to get patronage would be very
ready to collect as low as N200 or N300 for a sex romp.
At nightfall, Small Kuramo is a dangerous place for any poor mixer
or lily-livered individual. This is because thugs, miscreants, thieves
and drug peddlers file out to carry out their nefarious activities. This
reporter noticed shady looking young men lurking in dark corners,
whistling and shakily flashing small handset torchlights at passersby. Saturday Expdonaloaded blog gathered
that these young men are peddlers and racketeers of all sorts of
illicit drugs. And they stock assorted substances from ‘weed’ (Indian
hemp) to Crack, Rephenol, Heroine and other illicit drugs. These drug
sellers target younger and newly initiated sex workers, to get them
hooked on drugs. The young initiates now binge on drugs, to get high and
cover their shame for being a sex worker. shakily flashing small
handset torchlights at
Small Kuramo parades all sheds of sex hawkers, and is notoriously
known to harbour a lots of child prostitutes. Here young girls of 14
years, and women as old as 60 years all scramble to survive in Small
Kuramo. Investigation revealed that most of the young girls run away
from their homes, only to be sucked into the sordidness of Small Kuramo.
A resident of this community, who pleaded anonymity, alleged that
many owners of the lounges bury charms in their bars to lure girls from
the community into this red light district. “Small Kuramo has polluted
this neighbourhood. It has turned to a place where child prostitution
thrives. When you go to some of these lounges, you’ll find girls of 14,
15, 16 and 17 years prostituting there. These are children that should
be at home helping their parents, and thinking of their future. But they
get bewitched and are lured into the dirty life of Small Kuramo where
they become sex workers and drug addicts.”
With the booming drug and sex trade, another factor that makes Small
Kuramo a safe haven for criminal activities is the Police. One of the
residents that only gave her name as Samantha Utubu disclosed that
policemen mingle freely with thugs and even patronize these drug
peddlers. That is why they seldom make serious arrests. “If we have
real police men here, Small Kuramo would not exist and these criminals
would be operating underground,” Utubu said.
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