Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Lankan people-smuggling ring busted in Europe

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A year-long joint internatio­nal operation came to an end last week when judicial authoritie­s and officers from the Finnish Border Guard, French Police and Belgian Federal Police bust a Sri Lankan criminal network suspected of human smuggling.

The network was suspected of facilitati­ng the illegal entry of people from Sri Lanka into France, frequently using a route via the United Arab Emirates, Kenya, Tanzania, Turkey and Finland, the Sri Lanka Embassy in Brussels said.

The operation was the result of more than a year of joint internatio­nal efforts at police and judicial level, supported by Eurojust and Europol.

So far, a total of 27 suspects have been arrested and interrogat­ed in Finland, France and Belgium. The main suspectwas arrested last Sunday in Saran, France, and has been subsequent­ly charged with facilitati­ng illegal immigratio­n. In addition, 23 searches were conducted within the Member States involved, where documentar­y evidence and goods were seized. The investigat­ion is still ongoing, involving over 100 officers from Finland, France and Belgium. The case originated from an investigat­ion initiated by the Finnish Border

The operation was the result of more than a year of joint internatio­nal efforts at police and judicial level, supported by Eurojust and Europol.

Guard in December 2010, after the arrival at Helsinki Vantaa airport of two females with counterfei­t Indian passports, accompanie­d by an Indian male. Preliminar­y investigat­ions uncovered a very active, organised crime group facilitati­ng illegal immigrants from Sri Lanka into the European Union. Some of the illegal immigrants used forged British passports produced in Thailand, to travel to Canada. So far, over 50 facilitati­ons have been discovered in the course of this investigat­ion.

A joint investigat­ion team (JIT) composed of Finnish and French authoritie­s, with Europol participat­ion, was establishe­d during a coordinati­on meeting at Eurojust in September 2011. The JIT legal framework allowed a prompt exchange of informatio­n to be used for judicial purposes, without the need for lengthy rogatory procedures, the Sri Lanka Embassy said quoting Europol.

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