Saturday, 22 October 2016

Europol Busts Human Trafficking, Crime Syndicates With Nigerian Link

Police forces from 52 countries across the European Union arrested over 300 people and swooped on red-light districts to bust several trafficking gangs in a week-long, round-the-clock operation, Europol said Wednesday.

The action led by the European police agency focused “on disrupting the most dangerous criminal networks currently active” including those dealing in illegal immigration, people and drug trafficking and cybercrime.
The nationalities of those arrested as well as those rescued showed that “trafficking networks originating in Nigeria, Asia and Eastern Europe are the most active in the EU”.

Some 529 victims of trafficking were found in brothels and massage parlours, a total of 314 people arrested and about 2.4 tonnes of cocaine was seized.

Operation Ciconia Alba was coordinated by Europol from its headquarters in The Hague in what it called “a major blow to organised crime groups operating across the European Union and beyond.”

Raids “targeted red-light districts, brothels, massage parlours, private apartments, airports and immigration reception centres,” the agency said in a statement.

A fake travel agency was uncovered in Greece and a total of 745 migrants were identified in the operation which also involved the European border agency Frontex, Interpol and Eurojust.

More than 540,000 people and vehicles were searched and checked and a total of 181,500 euros was seized.

The raids also aimed to crackdown on credit card fraud, and among those arrested were 140 people caught with airline tickets bought with stolen credit cards.

And in Austria, during a raid on an illegal brothel, police also uncovered a cannabis plantation.
“Countries and organisations across the globe working together as one entity is the modern response to borderless serious and organised crime,” said Europol chief Rob Wainwright.

Alongside all EU members, some 24 non-EU nations took part including Ecuador, Indonesia, Nigeria, the United States and the United Arab Emirates.

Culled from: Guardian Newspaper

No comments:

Post a Comment

What are your thoughts on this post?