China Daily

Gang put on trial for traffickin­g

Suspects accused of kidnapping Vietnamese women for marriage

- By ZHANG YAN in Beijing and LI YINGQING in Kunming Contact the writers at zhangyan1@chinadaily.com.cn

Thirteen suspects are awaiting verdicts on accusation­s of cross-border human traffickin­g in Southwest China’s Yunnan province.

They are accused of traffickin­g or purchasing 27 Vietnamese women and bringing them to China for forced marriages between July 2014 and April 2016, according to prosecutor­s cited in a report on Thursday by www.yunnan.cn, a provincial news portal.

Court documents obtained by China Daily on Friday show that the trial was conducted on May 11 at a court in Kai yuan.

Among the 13 defendants, 10 were accused of kidnapping or purchasing 27 Vietnamese women from ChinaVietn­am border areas, and reselling them for 33,000 yuan to 100,000 yuan ($4,800 to $14,500) each in rural areas.

The other defendants were accused of buying the women knowing that they were abducted, according to prosecutor­s.

“These women were cheated or drugged, and were forcibly taken to China. They were traded like commoditie­s and resold several times to be the wives of strangers.

“Many of these women were married in Vietnam and had children, and some of them were college students,” according to prosecutio­n.

The documents did not reveal whether these women had returned to Vietnam.

In court, prosecutor­s said the defendants had formed an organized gang, with some responsibl­e for finding victims, some bringing them to China, some contacting agents and some selling them.

However, some defendants argued in court that they were just marriage brokers who introduced foreign women for marriage, rather than traffickin­g them.

Although the suspects did not torture or illegally detain the women, they took advantage of the language barrier, and the women’s lack of money and identity documents,to limit their freedom, according to the prosecutor­s.

For many men in poor rural areas in China, looking for a wife remains a problem, giving an opportunit­y to human trafficker­s.

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