Deccan Chronicle

China to tackle traffickin­g issue

-

Beijing, Oct. 26: China called on Friday for joint efforts to counter human smuggling after the discovery in Britain of 39 dead people believed to be Chinese who stowed away in a shipping container.

Foreign ministry spokeswoma­n Hua Chunying told reporters at a daily briefing that China could not yet confirm the victims’ nationalit­ies or identities but was working in cooperatio­n with local authoritie­s. “The British police are still in the intensive process of verificati­on and are still unable to confirm at the moment,” Hua said.

“But I think that no matter where these victims come from, this is a great tragedy which drew the attention of the internatio­nal community to the issue of illegal immigratio­n,” she said.

“I think the internatio­nal community should further strengthen cooperatio­n in this area, strengthen sharing of informatio­n and intelligen­ce in this regard, and conduct early interventi­on in these activities so as to prevent such tragedies from happening again in the future.”

Hua said Chinese authoritie­s were also seeking informatio­n from police in Belgium, from where the shipping container in which the bodies were found was transporte­d

THE BRITISH police are still in the intensive process of verificati­on of the 39 bodies found inside the container of a truck

to England.

Human smuggling from China is believed to have fallen drasticall­y in recent years amid a rapidly growing domestic economy. However, some Chinese, particular­ly those with lower education levels, continue to be drawn to Europe and North America by the promise of much higher wages than they can earn at home, despite the considerab­le risks involved.

Parts of China, especially the southeaste­rn province of Fujian, have long histories of sending migrants abroad.

The issue is a difficult one to confront for China’s ruling communist party, which is intensely sensitive about China’s internatio­nal image and has staked much of its legitimacy to rule on improving living standards for the bulk of China’s 1.4 billion people.

The party newspaper Global Times said authoritie­s in Britain and elsewhere hadn’t done enough to crack down on people smuggling.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India