Chinese police have arrested 608 suspects and rescued 178
children in busts of two separate child trafficking networks,
authorities say.
The Ministry of Public Security said prosecutors were
preparing cases against the suspects, suggesting charges have
yet to be filed.
Its statement posted online said 5000 police across 10
provinces cooperated for six months on the investigation and
moved in to arrest the suspects last week.
Child trafficking is big problem in China, where traditional
preference for male heirs and a strict one-child policy has
driven a thriving market in baby boys, who fetch a
considerably higher price than girls. Girls and women also
are abducted and used as labourers or as brides for unwed
sons.
Tens of thousands of children go missing every year, though
the exact numbers of victims are difficult to obtain.
The rescued children will be put into orphanages while
authorities try to reunite them with their families, the
ministry said. It didn't give the age range of the abducted
children or other specifics.
State broadcaster CCTV aired footage showing female police
officers cradling babies in their arms. The footage also
showed more than a dozen suspects handcuffed and escorted by
officers, or lined up outside a building in Fujian province.
Families who bought trafficked children would be forbidden
from keeping them, a ministry official told CCTV.
"Those who have paid for these children must be punished by
losing both the child and the money, so that the market
shrinks gradually and eventually, the number of child
trafficking cases will be substantially reduced," Chen Shiqu,
director of the ministry's human trafficking department, was
quoted as saying.
An investigation into a traffic accident in south China's
Sichuan province in May led police to the first ring, which
was allegedly selling children abducted or bought in Sichuan
to buyers in central China's Hebei province and elsewhere.
The ring had links to at least 26 gangs nationwide, the
ministry said.
The second ring was uncovered in August and was based in
southeast China's Fujian province and led by a female suspect
identified as Chen Xiumei.
The statement said police have cracked more than 7,000 gangs
or rings that sold women or children since a special campaign
against human trafficking started in April 2009. It said
18,518 children and 34,813 women have been rescued.
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