Eastern Eye (UK)

Mumbai police crack down on baby-traffickin­g ring

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POLICE in Mumbai have charged nine alleged members of a baby-traffickin­g ring, among them a nurse at a maternity hospital and agents who operated in the slums of Mumbai, officials said on Monday (18).

In the second such case in the city in five years, the nine are accused of having bought and sold at least seven babies over a six-year period.

The mothers of three infants and a man who had bought a baby were also arrested in a four-day police operation. “We’re now investigat­ing how many more children have they sold and if there are more agents operating in the area,” said police inspector Yogesh Chavan, who received a about the baby-traffickin­g racket last week.

“The mothers of the babies were poor and the buyers were couples desperate for a child,” he said.

The nine suspects have been charged under India’s anti-traffickin­g laws and juvenile justice laws against the buying and selling of children.

Police said they have not yet taken the babies involved away from the couples who bought them and were awaiting a consultati­on from child welfare officials. Preliminar­y investigat­ions suggest gang members targeted poor pregnant women in a slum area close to the city’s affluent

Bandra Kurla Complex business district,

tip-off officials said. The maternity hospital nurse would then put childless couples she met through work in touch with the pregnant women, charging couples up to `100,000 (£1,004) for making the connection. Baby girls were sold for `70,000 and baby boys for `150,000, on top of the connection fee, police said.

In 2016, Mumbai police arrested five women accused of selling babies to childless couples in various states. India recorded more than 1,100 cases of child traffickin­g in 2019, according to government data, up from 1,000 cases recorded a year earlier.

Officials have said an increase in baby traffickin­g is reducing the number of children available for adoption as more couples wait to adopt.

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