Sunday Tribune

11 people in India arrested for alleged baby traffickin­g

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KOLKATA: Eleven people have been arrested in India on suspicion of duping single women into selling their newborn babies and traffickin­g the infants inside biscuit containers to an adoption centre to be sold on to childless couples, police said on Wednesday.

A senior official from Crime Investigat­ion Department (CID) in the eastern state of West Bengal, said the arrests began on Monday after police raided a private nursing home and found two babies hidden in cardboard boxes in a locked medical storeroom.

Those arrested included the owner, midwives and other staff at the nursing home in Baduria, 80km from Kolkata.

Police have also arrested court clerks suspected of making fake documentat­ion for the children and the head of a charity which ran the adoption centre.

“The inquiry is under way and more informatio­n will be revealed only after some more progress is made,” said Bharat Lal Meena, deputy inspector general for the CID in West Bengal.

Staff at the nursing home and the charity were not available for comment.

Police said initial investigat­ions indicated that unmarried girls and women who visited the clinic for an abortion were persuaded by staff to give birth and sell their babies.

The police did not give a price, but local news reports said the mothers were given 300 000 rupees (R62 000) for a boy and 100 000 rupees for a girl.

Babies were also stolen from women who delivered at the clinic, but who were told by staff their children were stillborn. Some were even shown the bodies of stillborn babies preserved by the clinic to dupe parents, police said.

The babies, mostly newborns, were then smuggled in cartons used to store biscuits, and taken by road to an adoption centre 25km away in Machlandap­ur, where they were sold to childless couples.

“It was a well organised syndicate, incorporat­ing all kinds of helping hands needed for the smuggling network,” said another CID official, who did not wish to be identified because he is not authorised to speak to reporters.

The CID officer said more arrests were likely in the coming days.

Reports of human traffickin­g in India increased by 25 percent in 2015 compared to the previous year, with more than 40 percent of cases involving children being bought, sold and exploited as modern day slaves, government crime data shows.

The National Crime Records Bureau said there were 6 877 cases related to human traffickin­g last year against 5 466 in 2014, with the highest number of cases reported in the northeast state of Assam, followed by West Bengal state.

South Asia, with India at its centre, is one of the fastestgro­wing regions for human traffickin­g in the world.

Gangs sell thousands of victims into bonded labour every year or hire them out to exploitati­ve bosses. Many women and girls are sold into brothels.

India, alone is home to 40 percent of the world’s estimated 45.8 million slaves, according to a 2016 global slavery index published by the Australiab­ased Walk Free Foundation. – Reuters

 ?? Picture: REUTERS ?? A woman paints the floor of a pond as her child pulls at her saree in Delhi, India. May poor women and children are trafficked in India.
Picture: REUTERS A woman paints the floor of a pond as her child pulls at her saree in Delhi, India. May poor women and children are trafficked in India.

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