More than 200 prostitutes went on the rampage in a market town in southern Nigeria, torching buildings after their brothels were demolished, local media reported on today.
The incident took place on Tuesday in Amansea in southeastern Nigeria where local officials recently razed a number of sex workers' homes on grounds they were hosting "kidnappers and armed robbers", the Vanguard daily reported.
More than 200 of them gathered at the town's cattle market where their former homes once stood, and began setting fire to other buildings in the area.
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"They are very wicked and inhuman," one sex workers called Rachael told NAN, the Nigerian news agency.
"How can they destroy our houses without notice, leaving behind some kiosks and canteens that belong to cattle traders?"
There were no reports of injuries or arrests at the demonstration.
The decision to raze their homes was part of an anti-crime drive by by Willie Obiano, governor of Anambra state where Amansea is located, a regional official told various media.
"Anywhere there is brothel, criminals and kidnappers hover around," said Nathan Enemuo head of the Anambra State Urban Development Board.
Although prostitution is illegal in Nigeria, it is widespread with high levels of unemployment forcing many women onto the streets and into brothels.
The sex trade is a sensitive subject in this conservative nation, which is roughly divided into a mainly Muslim north and largely Christian south, and where extremist group Boko Haram is waging a deadly insurgency to carve out a hardline Islamic state.