The Asian Age

Interpol: Sudan saves 85 minors from traffickin­g

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Paris, Sept. 10: Police in Sudan have rescued 94 victims of human traffickin­g, including 85 minors, from open- air gold mines near Khartoum and the city's internatio­nal airport among other places, Interpol said on Monday.

A statement by the internatio­nal police organisati­on, which coordinate­d the operation late last month, said 14 people, 12 of them women, have been arrested.

Police seized $ 20,000 during the operation, and Interpol said it is believed the money included ransom obtained in the abduction of a migrant among those rescued.

Many of the rescued minors had been found working in illegally operated gold mines east of Khartoum where the children, including 10- yearolds, handled mercury and cyanide. The rescued victims came from a halfdozen countries including Chad, Eritrea, Niger, Congo and South Sudan. Sudanese were also among the victims. Sudan is among African countries that are both a source of migration to Europe and a transit country and destinatio­n for smuggling.

The statement said that holding victims in bondage and using them for labor- intensive activities after being lured or coerced appears to be a method used by trafficker­s in the region.

Some 200 Sudanese officers took part in Operation Sawiyan, with the France- based police agency training and equipping investigat­ors. Police had access to Interpol databases containing records of millions of lost or stolen documents, the statement said.

It was unclear what would become of the rescued victims.

Police seized $ 20,000 during the operation Many of the rescued minors had been found working in illegally operated gold mines The rescued victims came from a half- dozen countries including Chad, Eritrea, Niger, Congo and South Sudan

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