The Columbus Dispatch

Interpol: 40 human trafficker­s arrested, 236 children saved

- By Angela Charlton

PARIS — Police in five African countries arrested 40 suspected human trafficker­s and rescued hundreds of victims — including 236 minors — in an exceptiona­lly large-scale Interpol-led operation.

Unusually, most of the suspects are women.

The trafficker­s lured vulnerable girls and young women into prostituti­on networks. Other victims were impoverish­ed children whose parents handed them over to people promising them a better life. Instead, they were forced to beg in the streets and deprived of food or clean water or otherwise abused if they didn’t bring in enough money, Interpol said.

When they were rescued, “some hadn’t taken a shower for two months,” Interpol criminal intelligen­ce officer Innocentia Apovo, who coordinate­d the operation, told The Associated Press.

The suspected trafficker­s had “little to no regard for working conditions or human life,” France-based Interpol said in a statement.

The police operation Nov. 6-10 was carried out simultaneo­usly in Chad, Mali, Mauritania, Niger and Senegal.

The victims came from several countries around Africa. The trafficker­s were from the five countries targeted in the police operation plus Nigeria.

The 40 suspects will face prosecutio­n in the countries where they were arrested, on charges including human traffickin­g, forced labor and child exploitati­on.

Aid groups and the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration are working to care for the victims.

One was a 16-year old Nigerian girl seeking work to earn money to care for her family. She was taken on by a “sponsor” in Mali who then forced her into prostituti­on to reimburse her travel costs, Interpol said.

Seven Nigerian girls saved from trafficker­s in Mali begged to be sent home after their rescue.

“They didn’t want to spend a single day further in Mali, given the ordeal they suffered,” Apovo said.

The operation was part of the German government-funded Sahel Project, which targets human traffickin­g in the region.

Interpol said officials from across the region met after the operation to discuss next steps for the victims and crossborde­r efforts against traffickin­g.

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