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China Busts Child Trafficking Ring, Recovers 15 Infants


FILE - A young Chinese boy poses as he and a group of children that were recently rescued from child traffickers. Police in China have broken a child trafficking ring that they say had been selling children from the remote southwest to buyers near the coast for as little as about $3,000.
FILE - A young Chinese boy poses as he and a group of children that were recently rescued from child traffickers. Police in China have broken a child trafficking ring that they say had been selling children from the remote southwest to buyers near the coast for as little as about $3,000.

Police in China have broken a child trafficking ring that they say had been selling children from the remote southwest to buyers near the coast 2,000 km (1,245 miles) away for as little as about $3,000, the state news agency Xinhua has reported.

Police caught 78 suspects and rescued 15 infants, the report late on Wednesday said.

Xinhua said police spotted a suspicious couple in September that traveled frequently between the mountainous town of Liangshan in Sichuan province and the city of Linyi in Shandong province near the coast.

"The wife purchased infants in Liangshan, and transported them to Linyi. The husband was responsible for seeking buyers in the city," it said, quoting the findings of the investigation.

Baby boys were sold for 50,000-60,000 yuan ($7,600-$9,120), while girls were sold for 20,000-30,000 yuan, Xinhua quoted police as saying.

The rescued infants were being cared for by a local civil affairs department. Doctors had taken blood samples to help find their biological parents, Xinhua reported.

The investigation was continuing but Xinhua did not give further details. Child trafficking is rampant in China, where population control policies, although recently relaxed, have bolstered a traditional bias for male offspring, seen as the main support for elderly parents and heirs to the family name, and have
resulted in abortions, killings or abandonment of girls.

The imbalance has created criminal demand for abducted or bought baby boys, but also for baby girls destined to be future brides attracting rich dowries.

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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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