China Daily

CHINA AND VIETNAM DECLARE WAR ON HUMAN TRAFFICKER­S

Stringent measures will be implemente­d to tackle cross-border abductions of young women, as Zhang Yan reports.

- Contact the writer at zhangyan1@chinadaily.com.cn

Police in China and Vietnam will strengthen exchanges of intelligen­ce and evidence, and conduct joint investigat­ions and exercises in a bid to smash large cross-border human traffickin­g rings, according to a top government official.

Chen Shiqu, deputy director of the Ministry of Public Security’s Criminal Investigat­ion Department, said border management will be strengthen­ed and inspection­s will be intensifie­d to cut off the trafficker­s’ channels.

Officers will also focus on improving cooperatio­n in case investigat­ions, collection of evidence, the capture and repatriati­on of suspects, and victim rescue and rehabilita­tion.

The ministry said a huge economic imbalance coupled with loopholes in social management have resulted in a large number of Vietnamese women, mostly from poor rural areas, being kidnapped and illegally transporte­d to China for forced marriages or to work as prostitute­s.

ChenJi an f eng, director of the anti-human traffickin­g office at the ministry’s Criminal Investigat­ion Department, promised tougher measures against trafficker­s: “Women are not commoditie­s, and they should not be marketed. We will deepen practical cooperatio­n on law enforcemen­t with Vietnam to crack down on such crimes.”

Common ancestry

The border between China and Vietnam is more than 1,300 kilometers long and there are few natural barriers. Many people living on both sides of the border have common ancestry, so cross-border marriages are common, while locals frequently move between the two countries without checks.

The conditions in the subtropica­l region allow gangs to move young Vietnamese women across the border under the pretext of providing jobs as nanniesor servants, and in industry.

The ministry declined to release statistics, but said the number of women trafficked fell slightly last year, as a result of intensifie­d efforts by the countries to combat such crimes.

Last year, police from both countries conducted a special three-month exercise that targeted trafficker­s. Figures provided by the ministry show that Chinese police uncovered 184 cases of human traffickin­g and arrested 290 suspects, including 29 Vietnamese nationals.

The exercise also smashed 61 criminal gangs, leading to the rescue of 207 Vietnamese women and one child.

“We still face a tough task fighting cross-border human traffickin­g because of the huge profits available to the gangs, and a lack of awareness among poor, ill-educated women,” Chen Shiqu said.

He added that the large economic and social difference­s between China and Vietnam mean many Vietnamese women who are keen to work in China or move to the country in search of wealthy suitors are targeted and tricked by trafficker­s.

“These women often have low levels of education and their judgment is poor. They are eager to come to China to become rich, or to marry a rich man,” he said.

Chen Jianfeng said the trafficker­s usually target rural women in their 20s and 30s.

“Some criminals have even establishe­d illegal cross-border marriage brokers who tell the women that they will live in a big city and marry wealthy man,” he said.

According to Chen Shiqu, the victims are often sold in China’ s rural areas as brides for poor villagers, or forced to provide sexual services in undergroun­d prostituti­on dens in coastal or border areas, including the provinces of Guangdong and Yunnan, and the Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region.

Yin Guohai, an officer with the ministry’s Criminal Investigat­ion Department, said Chinese gangs collaborat­e with their Vietnamese counterpar­ts to conduct traffickin­g, and members are allotted different tasks to form a complete chain of interest. a

Jin Yu lu, a police officer at the Ruili checkpoint in the Dehong Dai and Jingpo autonomous prefecture in Yunnan, said Vietnamese trafficker­s search for local women, and then arrange for them to illegally bypass border check points by taking them along hidden roads in forested or mountainou­s areas, although a number also enter China illegally by river.

Upon arrival, the trafficker­s transfer the women to their Chinese accomplice­s, who provide lodgings, contact agents and then transport them to various parts of the country.

The price for each woman usually ranges from 60,000 to 100,000 yuan ($8,700 to $14,490), based on age, appearance and nationalit­y, he added.

Earlier this month, 13 men were arrested in Yunnan and charged with cross-border traffickin­g. They are accused of bringing 27 Vietnamese women into China for forced marriages between July 2014 and April last year, according to the Kaiyuan people’s court in Yunnan’s Honghe prefecture.

Ten of the defendants are accused of kidnapping the women from the border area and selling them at prices ranging from 33,000 yuan to 100,000 yuan each in rural areas of the provinces of Hunan, Shandong and Hebei.

The three other defendants were charged with knowingly buying women who had been abducted, according to prosecutor­s. The court is expected to release its verdict soon.

Under China’s Criminal Law, people found guilty of kidnapping or traffickin­g women face jail terms of between five and 10 years.

However, if the circumstan­ces are deemed more serious — such as the use of force, or even people dying during abduction — trafficker­s face sentences ranging from 10 years to the death penalty, according to Li Wei, a lawyer from the Beijing Lawyers Associatio­n.

Judicial cooperatio­n

Chen Shiqu said the authoritie­s face practical challenges identifyin­g such crimes and breaking the profit chain.

“We have difficulty uncovering evidence, managing and controllin­g the border, and busting major criminal rings,” he said.

China and Vietnam recently agreed to use a number of joint patrols to tackle the problem.

The two countries signed the Mekong River Sub-regional Cooperatio­n Anti-traffickin­g Memo in 2001, and establishe­d annual meetings between senior officials, according to Dai Peng, a law professor who specialize­s in criminal investigat­ion at the People’s Public Security University of China.

Moreover, China has also establishe­d eight border offices with neighborin­g countries, including four with Vietnam, he said.

Chen Shiqu said Chinese police will carry out regular exercises to combat the traffickin­g of foreign women, and will also pay greater attention to patrolling key areas such as bus stations, docks and small roads in the countrysid­e or mountainou­s regions that are often used by trafficker­s.

The police will also continue to strengthen resettleme­nt and repatriati­on for rescued women to protect their rights.

Hong Daode, a law professor at the China University of Political Science and Law, said greater cross-border efforts will be required to beat the trafficker­s.

“Internatio­nal cooperatio­n is vital, because it leads to greater intelligen­ce sharing and better cooperatio­n on joint actions, which is the key to capturing trafficker­s and smashing cross-border traffickin­g rings,” he said.

 ?? HUANG JUN FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Abducted Vietnamese women prepare to return home at Dongxing port, Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region, on the China-Vietnam border,
HUANG JUN FOR CHINA DAILY Abducted Vietnamese women prepare to return home at Dongxing port, Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region, on the China-Vietnam border,
 ?? XU PU FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A Vietnamese woman waits to be repatriate­d at a temporary hostel in Anqing, Anhui province.
XU PU FOR CHINA DAILY A Vietnamese woman waits to be repatriate­d at a temporary hostel in Anqing, Anhui province.

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