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Chinese nationals involved in fake marriages & human trafficking arrested

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The Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) on Friday arrested three more Chinese nationals suspected of involvement in fake marriages and human trafficking from the Islamabad airport.

The FIA's immigration cell also took into custody three local women who were accompanying the Chinese men. The three couples were intercepted as they were about to leave for China.

The Chinese Embassy, however, through a statement on Friday denied that there was "forced prostitution or sale of human organs of those Pakistani women who stay in China after marriage with Chinese".

"It is worth noting that several media reports have fabricated facts and spread rumors. According to investigations by the Ministry of Public Security of China, there is no forced prostitution or sale of human organs for those Pakistani women who stay in China after marriage with Chinese," read the statement. "The Chinese Embassy in Pakistan has clarified the rumors by issuing a statement on April 13 [...] We hope the people of China and Pakistan do not believe the rumors."

Read more: Suspected prostitution ring: FIA arrests 14 more Chinese nationals, recovers girls and weapons

A day earlier, the FIA announced that it had already taken 11 Chinese nationals into custody for a probe into a transnational gang allegedly involved in prostitution and illegal organ trade.

An FIA press release detailed how the agency had come to know about the the suspected ring, which involves large sums of money changing hands for the contracting of fake marriages between vulnerable Pakistani women and Chinese men. The women are later allegedly trafficked into prostitution in China.

Fake marriage and agents
According to the FIA, a woman from Lahore was married off to a Chinese national after her father was approached by an 'agent' claiming to run a marriage bureau.

The 'agent' told the father that he was in contact with some foreign individuals who had recently converted to Islam and were looking for Pakistani girls to marry.

The 'agent' said that the Chinese man would reside permanently in Pakistan, but spend a few months a year abroad with his wife, who would be helped find employment as domestic help to earn some money.

The man then married off his daughter to a Chinese man, Chan Yen Ming, who had introduced himself to the Pakistani family as Musa. He told his father-in-law that he was a converted Muslim.

Three to four days after marrying the woman, Ming took her to China, the FIA statement said. Some time later, the woman called her family to tell them that they had been conned.

She said that Musa had only posed as a Muslim and had not actually converted to Islam. She also told her family that Ming was trying to force her into prostitution and had physically abused her upon her refusal.

She also said that some people in China were running a business of luring Pakistani women into China to force them into prostitution, and that the suspects were also running an organ trade racket, the FIA press release stated.

Hearing this, the woman's father contacted the agent who had set up the marriage and was told to contact their boss Wei Lin Ping, alias David, in Islamabad.

Upon approaching the boss, Ping said that he had paid Rs2 million to the agent for the woman, and unless the father could return the money she would either have to engage in prostitution or sell her organs.

FIA crackdown
When the FIA was informed about the incident, a request was sent to the Pakistan High Commission in China, and the woman was repatriated to Pakistan.

Back home, the woman informed the FIA of the ringleader Ping's residence in Lahore. Using her tip off, the FIA conducted a raid and arrested at least eight Chinese individuals and two Pakistanis, and recovered the eight Chinese and three Pakistani passports, the press release said.

The FIA later arrested three more Chinese nationals who, according to the agency, were connecting potential grooms with local agents, who were responsible for engaging possible victims. The three were arrested in different raids from the surrounding areas of Lahore.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1481430/3...ted-of-fake-marriages-arrested-from-islamabad
 
I see Chinese are marrying Pak Christian girl's in large numbers for some reason. Another thing that should concern us is 10 million Chinese people will supposedly be living in Pak due to CPEC really soon. I don't know why the PTI government is ignoring these issues. IK even went as far as playing dumb to the situation of Muslim's in China.
 
These Chinese are so short of women in their own country that they start coercing the local woman into marriage in whichever country they arrive for working on projects . Chinese men have been marrying African women bigtime as many Chinese Men work in African countries these days on International projects.

There is no doubt that CPEC will bring a lot of economic prosperity to Pakistan but there is a also a risk of Chinese spreading nefarious activities in Pakistan leading to a friction with the locals.
 
I see Chinese are marrying Pak Christian girl's in large numbers for some reason. Another thing that should concern us is 10 million Chinese people will supposedly be living in Pak due to CPEC really soon. I don't know why the PTI government is ignoring these issues. IK even went as far as playing dumb to the situation of Muslim's in China.

10mn? You sure?
 
I see Chinese are marrying Pak Christian girl's in large numbers for some reason. Another thing that should concern us is 10 million Chinese people will supposedly be living in Pak due to CPEC really soon. I don't know why the PTI government is ignoring these issues. IK even went as far as playing dumb to the situation of Muslim's in China.

10 million? Are you crazy?
 
Pakistanis will do anything to get settle in a foreign country.

When a child is born in Pakistan, it only has one aim in life - leave Pakistan and settle abroad somehow. Anything for a foreign passport.

Recently, some Pakistani parents sold their daughters to Chinese men who were taken to China, tortured and made to commit immoral activities.
 
Two girls say Chinese husbands running brothel

SARGODHA: Two girls belonging to Kot Momin have alleged that two Chinese men married them and attempted to smuggle them to China, but they managed to escape after realising that their ‘husbands’, who claimed to be Muslims, were running a brothel in Lahore on the pretext of a marriage bureau.

Samina and Tasawur Bibi of Kot Momin tehsil, some 50 kilometres from here, told the media that they belonged to poor families and their parents married them off to Chinese men, who assured their parents they will keep the girls in Lahore and arrange business for the families. But, the girls said, they realised that the men were neither Muslim nor honest. They also alleged that the Chinese were running a brothel and using the cover of a marriage bureau in Lahore’s DHA Phase I. They said that as soon as they found out the reality, they escaped.

Samina and Tasawur also approached a lawyer for dissolution of marriage and appealed to the Punjab inspector general of police to take action against the culprits.

Some Christian families are also eagerly waiting for any information on their daughters, who were married to Chinese men and later taken to China.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1483347/two-girls-say-chinese-husbands-running-brothel
 
Pakistanis will do anything to get settle in a foreign country.

When a child is born in Pakistan, it only has one aim in life - leave Pakistan and settle abroad somehow. Anything for a foreign passport.

Recently, some Pakistani parents sold their daughters to Chinese men who were taken to China, tortured and made to commit immoral activities.

Interesting view from a Pakistani settled in Hong Kong. :don
 
What is the gov of Pak doing to get the girl back to Pakistan?
 
FIA nabs two in trafficking case

RAWALPINDI: The anti-human trafficking cell of the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) Islamabad said on Friday it had arrested two additional suspects of a gang involved in the trafficking of Pakistani citizens who were arrested while travelling illegally in China to enter Hong Kong. This brings the total number of arrested suspects to four.

Authorities in China had detained the 35 Pakistanis following which the Prime Minister's Secretariat issued directives to the FIA to launch a crackdown against those involved in human trafficking.

Such crackdowns are routinely ordered in the wake of tragedies involving human trafficking such as the Greece boat tragedy in June this year in which more than 300 Pakistanis were killed after their boat capsized.

A cosmetic crackdown followed with the FIA claiming big arrests even as major trafficking networks continued to operate. The latest incident had the agencies scrambling again, with the claims of ‘big’ arrests in its wake.
 
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