Post-Tribune

Fate of 300 Indian travelers still in French judges’ hands

- By Angela Charlton and Elise Morton

PARIS — Judges in France were expected to decide Sunday whether about 300 Indian citizens who are suspected of being victims of human traffickin­g should continue to be sequestere­d in a small airport in Champagne country.

En route to Central America, the passengers have been held at Paris-Vatry Airport since Thursday after a dramatic police operation prompted by a tip about a possible human traffickin­g scheme, authoritie­s said.

The passengers appeared throughout the day before judges who will decide whether to extend their detention in the airport, according to the administra­tion for the Marne region. If they can’t be held any longer, they will be free to leave the country.

“I don’t know if this has ever been done before in France,” Francois Procureur, the head of the Châlons-en-Champagne Bar Associatio­n, told BFM TV on Saturday.

The situation is urgent because “we cannot keep foreigners in a waiting area for more than 96 hours. Beyond that, it is the liberty and custody judge who must rule on their fate,” he said.

The four-day period can be extended to eight days if a judge approves, then another eight days in exceptiona­l circumstan­ces.

With this urgency in mind, Procureur said four hearings would take place simultaneo­usly, with four judges, four clerks and at least four lawyers taking part in the proceeding­s along with the Indian citizens and interprete­rs. “We are all mobilized,” he said.

According to a statement from the Marne prefecture, the seizure order for the airliner was lifted Sunday morning, a decision which “makes it possible to contemplat­e the passengers in the waiting area being rerouted.”

The French Civil Aviation Authority then set about trying to get the necessary permission­s for the plane to take off once again, which should be in place “no later than Monday morning,” according to the prefecture.

Passengers were still undergoing questionin­g when the statement was issued.

The passengers included children and families. The youngest is a toddler of 21 months, and among the children are several unaccompan­ied minors, according to the local civil protection agency.

Two of the passengers were detained as part of a special investigat­ion into suspected human traffickin­g by an organized criminal group, according to the Paris prosecutor’s office. Prosecutor­s wouldn’t comment on what kind of traffickin­g was alleged or whether the ultimate destinatio­n was the U.S.

The 15 crew members of the Legend Airlines charter flight — an unmarked A340 plane en route from Fujairah airport in the United Arab Emirates to Managua, Nicaragua — were questioned and released, according to a lawyer for the Romania-based airline.

Legend Airlines lawyer Liliana Bakayoko said the company was cooperatin­g with French authoritie­s and has denied any role in possible human traffickin­g.

 ?? CHRISTOPHE ENA/AP ?? A French police officer walks in front of the plane that reportedly carried some 300 Indian citizens, at the Vatry airport, Saturday in Vatry, eastern France.
CHRISTOPHE ENA/AP A French police officer walks in front of the plane that reportedly carried some 300 Indian citizens, at the Vatry airport, Saturday in Vatry, eastern France.

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