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Hunan welfare organs involved in infant trafficking (Xinhua) Updated: 2005-12-02 21:23 Seven leaders and staff
members of two welfare organizations in central China's Hunan province were
taken into custody under suspicion of infant trafficking, the local pubic
security bureau reported.
Since August, public security police in Hengyang City had been investigating
into infant trafficking involving two welfare organizations in the city.
So far they have arrested a total of 16 suspects.
A leader in charge of another welfare organization in Qidong County under
Hengyang is also under investigation, said a public security official.
In the past two years these traffickers have made 300,000 yuan (37,000 US
dollars) by abducting and trafficking 31 infants from the southern province of
Guangdong.
"The abducted infants, ranging in age from a few days to several months, are
all girls," said Xiao Haibo, deputy director with Hengyang public security
bureau.
This August, the public security bureau of Qidong County was informed that
some infants were being abducted from Zhanjiang and Wuchuan in Guangdong
Province to neighboring Qidong and Hengyang counties in Hunan province, Xiao
said.
In mid-November, the police decided to make thorough arrests and sent an
investigation panel to Guangdong.
On November 18, two suspected traffickers about to deliver three infants
smuggled from Guangdong to the persons with the welfare organizations at the
Hengyang Railway Station square were caught red-handed.
Apart from the three infants, the police also seized a Santana car and 12,000
yuan (1,480 US dollars) on the spot.
In Guangdong, police officers found a hideout, rescued two infants and
captured another seven suspects.
According to the suspects' confessions, in June 2003 they began buying
infants from the Guangdong abductors at 800 to 2,000 yuan (99 to 247 US dollars)
each. Then they sold them to the welfare organs in Hengyang and Qidong.
Looking after them for a while, these organizations then sold them for 4,000
yuan (494 US dollars) each.
Some of them were even sold to foreign adopters, said the official, adding
that they are now looking into the hometowns and whereabouts of the trafficked
infants.
The cases have aroused the provincial government's attention and drawn strong
public repercussion. Some interviewed citizens said the responsible persons
deserve punishment.
A special investigation panel has been commissioned for final
verification.
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