Chinese Girls Kidnapping

Chinese Girls Kidnapping




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Chinese girl kidnapped in 2005 and sold to child traffickers
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Published: 09:03 BST, 11 March 2015 | Updated: 12:57 BST, 11 March 2015
As many as 200,000 boys and girls are kidnapped in China every year and sold openly online, it’s been reported.
Child trafficking has been a long-standing problem in China, but despite the efforts of the authorities, the sinister practice is thriving, leading to thousands of families being torn apart.
The US State Department believes that 20,000 children are snatched every year – that’s 400 a week.
As many as 200,000 boys and girls are kidnapped in China every year and sold openly online, it’s been reported
However, Chinese state media says the figure could be as high as 200,000, according to the BBC .
Baby boys, who are preferred in China because they’ll ensure the family name remains intact, can sell for as much as £10,500.
In a bid to evade the spotlight of the police, child traffickers in recent years have turned to the internet to do their selling.
Last year hundreds of babies were rescued by police in China after a crackdown was launched on trafficking infants.
The nationwide bust saw 1,094 people arrested as officers acted on information relating to four major internet-based baby trafficking rings.
China's Public Security Ministry said 382 babies were rescued after four websites were found to be selling children under the guise of adoption.
Baby boys, who are preferred in China because they’ll ensure the family name remains intact, can sell for as much as £10,500
Some critics say the trade is fuelled by the country’s one-child policy.
The strict laws limit many families to one child, and with boys being favoured as heirs to the family name, many female babies are sold - typically fetching half the amount boys do - aborted or abandoned.
Poverty fuels the trade, while illicit profits tempts traffickers, resulting in a thriving market for babies and toddlers.
An investigation by the BBC revealed the plight of one father, Xiao Chaohua, who has not seen his son since February 2007 after he disappeared from their home in Huizhou, aged five.
Since then Mr Chaohua has scoured the nation and even taken out TV adverts in an effort to find him, but to no avail.
He claims that the problem of trafficking can only be eradicated if tougher laws are brought in to punish those to buy kidnapped children.
Presently, they face a three-year jail term if caught, but it’s claimed that many never find themselves in trouble over their actions.
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This article is more than 6 years old
We can’t be sure of the scale of the problem because there’s no official data. But that a lucrative trade in children exists is, heartbreakingly, beyond doubt
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A BBC report this week exposed China’s child trafficking problem to a global audience through the touching tale of Xiao Chaohua, a father whose five-year-old son was kidnapped by traffickers in 2007. It’s a story I am intimately familiar with. Although I have never met Xiao, I met dozens of parents in the same situation , while making a film on the same subject .
Kidnapping and child trafficking have been a problem in modern China since at least the 1980s. This is often presented as an unintended consequence of the one-child policy , but although that policy has been a factor, the truth is more complicated. The fact that there are many parents willing to sell their offspring to avoid being fined for having too many children has helped perpetuate the trafficking industry, which also trades in kidnapped kids. Additionally, the domestic “adoption” market for kidnapped children is bolstered by the fact that some parents would rather buy a son than pay the fines required to continue having children until they produce one.
But traditional attitudes are a significant part of the problem too. At the forefront, of course, is China’s traditional preference for sons (who traditionally stayed and supported parents into their old age) over daughters (who were traditionally married off into other families and were not a source of support). But in some parts of China , there is also a perception that children can be moved to new families based on supply and demand. If you had five children but your cousin had none, for example, it would not have been uncommon for you to give one of your kids to him to raise as his own. This helps explain why in some areas of China even today, a family can appear with a child who clearly isn’t biologically theirs without raising suspicions or inspiring anyone to call the police.
Not all kidnapping is related to domestic adoption, though. Children are also kidnapped or lured away from home to be sold into a life on the streets, begging for change or pickpocketing strangers while under the control of adult criminals. The kids are often told that their parents know what’s happening and are getting a cut of the money that they earn (though that’s never the case). Teenage boys are sometimes kidnapped and sold into forced labour, teenage girls can be kidnapped and forced into prostitution. And in at least a few cases, kidnapped children have been sold to Chinese orphanages and subsequently adopted by foreign couples. Because foreign adoptive parents must give orphanages a $5,000 donation when they take home their child and because children are often sold by traffickers for less than that, buying trafficked children can be a profitable enterprise for orphanages if it places them quickly enough.
Of course, kidnapping and child trafficking are illegal in China. And the problem has become widespread enough that the country now has a national anti-kidnapping taskforce. Every year, this taskforce carries out high-profile raids and liberates hundreds, sometimes thousands, of kidnapped children. But it is not able to solve these crimes at the rate they’re being committed. Kidnapping cases are extremely difficult for a number of reasons. Trafficking gangs have developed systems whereby children are passed between numerous people, making it difficult for police to track a missing child to their final destination. These gangs have also sometimes bribed local law enforcement or political authorities. And in the internet era, transactions can be carried out online, leaving no physical evidence that a child was sold if the seller covers his electronic tracks well enough.
Local law enforcement apathy is another problem. Kidnapping cases need to be addressed quickly – the longer the child is missing, the lower the chances they’ll be found again. But in China, many local police stations won’t accept a missing persons case unless the person has been missing for 24 hours – so unless there’s clear evidence of a kidnapping, the traffickers usually have at least a day’s head start. By the time local police even accept the case, the child is likely to be hundreds of miles away. Many parents complain that their local police are uninterested in seriously pursuing missing child cases, which they see as a waste of time and resources since they’re unlikely to be solved.
Because there’s no hard data on just how many children are kidnapped each year, it’s hard to say how many cases are solved. While making my film I met dozens of parents, with missing children both male and female ranging from infants to teenagers. I followed several of them as they scoured the country, pouring their hearts and their life savings into finding their kids. But in the years we spent filming, not a single one of them got their child back.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2989404/Child-snatchers-abducting-200-000-boys-girls-openly-selling-online-10-000-kidnapping-epidemic-destroying-families-China.html
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/mar/12/missing-kidnapped-trafficked-china-children
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