Saturday, September 28, 2013

Child-trafficking has become a serious problem in China

Chinese police rescue 92 abducted children

Child-trafficking has become a serious problem in China, correspondents say

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Chinese police have rescued 92 abducted children and held 301 suspected members of a huge trafficking network, the authorities say.
They say two women were also freed in an operation involving police forces in 11 provinces of the country.
The traffickers are believed to have targeted children in the south-western Yunnan and Sichuan provinces and then sold them in other regions.
Child-trafficking has become a serious problem in China, correspondents say.
Critics blame the country's one-child policy and lax adoption laws, which they say have created a thriving underground market for buying children.
Some families buy trafficked women and children to use as extra labour and household servants, as well as brides for unmarried sons.
Last year, more than 24,000 abducted women and children were freed in China, according to the public security ministry.
It said that some of those kidnapped had been sold for adoption or forced into prostitution.
Greater freedom of movement as a result of China's economic reforms is thought to have made it easier for trafficking gangs to operate.

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