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
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.
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
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