CNN)Police rescued 37
babies and a 3-year-old girl after busting a child trafficking ring in eastern
China's Shandong province, reported the state-run China Central Television.
The newborn
babies, many suffering from HIV/AIDS and malnutrition, were sold for between
50,000 yuan to 80,000 yuan ($8,000 to $12,912 dollars). The boys fetched higher
prices than girls, according to the online video report published on Tuesday.
Babies were often
transported in large handbags and suitcases to prospective buyers. And they
were allegedly fed instant noodles and leftover vegetables, according to
Chinese state media.
Authorities have
arrested 103 people, suspected of trafficking or purchasing the infants.
Police spotted a
suspicious group of pregnant women being ushered into an abandoned factory in
the city of Jining, last July, where they found baby diapers and other evidence
of it being used as an "underground delivery room."
"We noticed
there has been some new developments in the methods for child trafficking
related crimes," Chen Shiqu, director of the Ministry of Public Security's
Anti-trafficking Office told CCTV.
"For
example, some criminal gangs would send pregnant women who are about to give
birth via public transport to another city. The babies are then sold after the
women give birth," says Chen.
Squalid
conditions
An investigator
who was on the case said they detained seven suspects and found one baby nearly
smothered under blankets in the run-down factory with squalid living
conditions.
"At that
time, the baby's face was already turning purple, if we didn't search through
those blankets, that baby may have already died," said Liu Yang, a police
investigator.
In a two-month sting operation following
the raid, police discovered that the babies were often transported from the
factory in bags to a hospital for infectious diseases in a nearby suburb where
they were kept, awaiting buyers.
"Out
of the 37 babies we rescued, almost none of them were healthy. All had varying
levels of some sickness. They let the babies eat instant noodles," said
Hou Jun, a local police officer.
One
of the buyers, Liu Zhiyou said an agent told him it was an illegitimate child
from a student.
Some
of the babies have remained with their adoptive parents, while others are in
orphanages. The 3-year-old was reunited with her mother, according to Chinese
media.
According
to Chinese law, child traffickers can be imprisoned up to 10 years for selling more
than three children or sentenced to death in more serious cases.
Major concern
Child
trafficking has become a major concern in China, as traffickers seek to profit
off a growing demand for healthy babies from potential adoptive parents both in
China and beyond.
In
March last year, Chinese officials uncovered four
child-trafficking rings and
arrested more than a thousand people for using websites and instant messaging
groups to sell babies.
A
Chinese obstetrician was also convicted for selling babies after telling their parents they were
sick in early 2014.
culled
2 comments:
Omg! why child trafficking everywhere?
End time news is going on.
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