Home  

Mumbai cops probing abduction case end up busting multi-state child trafficking racket

Three of the accused, including the mastermind, were arrested in Goa where they had met with the abducted toddler.

Three of the accused, including the mastermind, were arrested in Goa where they had met with the abducted toddler. (Representation pic)

When 18-month-old Ahmed Khan went missing from outside his Mankhurd home, Mumbai police started searching for clues in the locality. However, they ended unearthing a child trafficking racket spanned across four states. The investigation led to the rescue of four other children, who were about to sold be by a non-government organisation (NGO) in Goa under the pretext of adoption.

Ahmed was playing outside his house when he went missing on December 4. Initially, family thought Yogita Salle had taken him as she would often play and look after him. However, when the Khans inquired with Salle about?Ahmed, she said she was clueless about the toddler’s whereabouts.

Unable to trace their son, Ahmed’s parents lodged a police complaint. After questioning various people from the locality, Mankhurd cops zeroed in Salle. But she turned out to be a smooth operator. Salle kept her mobile phone switched on and only contacted her husband, who was also being questioned by the cops. However, cops managed a breakthrough when they traced Salle’s location to Goa against her claims of being in Malad after the kidnapping. They then laid a trap and arrested Ganesh and his friends.

Stolen children, the 44 forgotten complaints So the state body conditioned the investigation

27 Feb. Stolen children, the 44 forgotten complaints So the state body conditioned the investigation

CHILDREN'S FRIENDS Premier Paolo Gentiloni, the Catholic right-wing leader Carlo Giovanardi, the undersecretary Maria Elena Boschi: they promoted the return of Aibi in the world of adoptions

CHILDREN'S FRIENDS Premier Paolo Gentiloni, the Catholic right-wing leader Carlo Giovanardi, the undersecretary Maria Elena Boschi: they promoted the return of Aibi in the world of adoptions

On January 5, 2015, forty-four families report to the Rome Public Prosecutor Marco Griffini and his association "Aibi-Amici dei bambini" for kidnapping and serious irregularities in the adoption procedures. But for two years the file remains registered in the register of facts that do not constitute a crime. And Griffini opens an investigation against the magistrate Della Monica, president of the Commission for international adoptions that is investigating him. The Deputy Prosecutor of the Capital: an act not only without foundation, but instrumental in order to interfere in the verification activity

SECOND BET

Cops Call It Forced Surrogacy

Cops Call It Forced SurrogacyFEED FOR THE LIFE FACTORY Girls rescued from traffickers reach Ranchi railway stationPHOTOGRAPH BY TRIBHUVAN TIWARIMailPrintShareShareAAA INCREASE TEXT SIZE

There’s something almost eerily Nazi about this. Not in terms of formal politics, of course. Only ­ordinary people are involved here. But their actions speak of a rarefied universe of cruelty—­elevated to an organised, clinical, coldly amoral enterprise. At the heart of it is the idea that one can ­exert ­absolute control over anot­her’s body. The terms of abuse go beyond even sadism; the ­human body here is just a device and also its product. The stories offer no great cause for optimism, but avoiding the dark dramas, and pretending they don’t exist, is precisely what allows them to grow.

The first story. We’ll call her Soni, as many of them are ­indeed called—an adivasi name that contains resonances. She is at an undisclosed location in Bihar at present, in hiding, fearing for her life, recuperating from the injuries to her soul. She breaks down often over the phone as she narrates her story. Of how she came to Delhi as a minor and, in sta­ges, passed through a dark mirror—to enter an unreal world of slavery that awaited on the other side, a tiny house, where unknown men set in motion a whole cycle of sowing and harvesting on her body. And that of other girls like her.

As the story starts, life looked cheerless but sufficiently normal. Soni was 15 in 2010 when she, along with four friends, moved out from her village in Jharkhand, joining the tide of humankind flowing out from that immiserated state. Volitio­nal, but only to a degree. For there was an agent, as always, and then a sale and transfer of ownership to an agency, and then the drudgery of housework in a typical Delhi home. She lost track of her friends. Six months on, a man came to see Soni, and said he was from the “off­ice”. He said nothing else—just saw her and left. Days later, another agent came, took her along to a new house. The people at the first house were nice, relatively. They slipped her Rs 10,000, which she concealed in her salwar.

The new house was tiny and sur­rounded by narrow lanes. Soni was made to sign papers she couldn’t read, something written in English. Then a strange rout­ine started—regular check-ups at a hospital, blood tests and, most importantly, strange injections. She didn’t understand why she needed them. There were other girls at the house, all sec­luded. The curtains were alw­ays firmly drawn. There were guards, agents, staff members and a caretaker, a woman from Jharkhand she called ‘didi’. The rhythms of life seemed regular—sleeping, waking, cleaning, eating. “I would want fish and they would get me fish. Nobody refused me any­thing. They were nice to me, I didn’t know why,” she says.

Nun who ran city orphanage held, sent to judicial custody

Baretto had earlier denied the charges

Baretto had earlier denied the charges

GURUGRAM: Sister Lily Baretto, who ran a shelter home in Gurgaon for years and was awarded in 2013 by the district administration for her work in the field of child care, was arrested in Delhi on Sunday and sent to judicial custody for 14 days by a city court on Monday.

Sister Baretto, a social worker who ran the orphanage, Ujjwal Niketan, for nearly two decades before it was shut down earlier this year, had been booked on charges of illegally handing over two children for adoption, and for "cruel treatment" of inmates at the orphanage. She had denied the charges in an earlier interaction with TOI.

An FIR had been filed against her at Sector 10 police station. Her anticipatory bail plea filed in the district court had been denied in July. Charges of human trafficking were later added, according to the police. Baretto has also been accused of cruelty to children by making them work at the orphanage (under section 75 of the Juvenile Justice Act) and section 420 (cheating) of the IPC in the FIR registered against her.

Paperless adoption puts cops on child trafficking trail

AHMEDABAD: When a childless couple from Shahpur was seen with a 10-day-old child earlier this week, it surprised many and one such observer informed city police about the incident on Monday. A police team reached Borsalli Apartment in Shahpur and found the child with the couple.

The couple said they had adopted the child from a hospital in Deesa. However, as there were no papers of adoption or government agencies involved, city police decided to take cognizance and approached Banaskantha police. Police detained one person in connection with the case and have started questioning to ascertain if this is a case of human trafficking.

Shahpur police said they got a call on Monday that Hiren Shah, a cloth trader, and his wife, were seen with a child. When police approached the family, they said the 10-day-old infant was adopted on January 21 from Aakash Hospital in Deesa through a man identified as Tinabhai. B J Gadhvi, inspector of Shahpur police station, said they recorded a non-cognizable offence and have sent the child and the case to Deesa for further investigation on Monday.

"The couple have been married for a decade and were trying to adopt a child. In their statement, the family mentioned that they learned about Aakash Hospital through their contacts and approached the officials there. They got a call and went there on January 21 and brought the child home," he said. The family members said that they got the child out of compassion and did not know about the rules. "We are cooperating with police in the probe," said a member of the extended family, who asked not to be identified by name.

.

Gurgaon: Child care centre’s caretaker arrested after evading arrest for four months

The CCI came under the scanner in February this year for accepting two minor girls and releasing them for adoption against the rules of the Juvenile Justice Act 2015.

The CCI came under the scanner in February this year for accepting two minor girls and releasing them for adoption against the rules of the Juvenile Justice Act 2015.(Parveen Kumar/HT FILE)

The 65-year-old caretaker of a child care Institute (CCI) in Gurgaon was arrested on Sunday night on charges of handing over children under her custody for adoption against the norms. She is also accused of child trafficking and was booked under relevant sections of the Juvenile Justice Act and the IPC.

Sister Lilly Baretto was arrested from a church in Sukhdev Vihar, Delhi, on Sunday night after technical surveillance, said the police. She had been evading arrest for last three months and had changed several locations and mobile numbers.

The CCI came under the scanner in February this year for accepting two minor girls and releasing them for adoption against the rules of the Juvenile Justice Act 2015.

Gurgaon: Child care centre’s caretaker arrested after evading arrest for four months

The CCI came under the scanner in February this year for accepting two minor girls and releasing them for adoption against the rules of the Juvenile Justice Act 2015.

The CCI came under the scanner in February this year for accepting two minor girls and releasing them for adoption against the rules of the Juvenile Justice Act 2015.(Parveen Kumar/HT FILE)

The 65-year-old caretaker of a child care Institute (CCI) in Gurgaon was arrested on Sunday night on charges of handing over children under her custody for adoption against the norms. She is also accused of child trafficking and was booked under relevant sections of the Juvenile Justice Act and the IPC.

Sister Lilly Baretto was arrested from a church in Sukhdev Vihar, Delhi, on Sunday night after technical surveillance, said the police. She had been evading arrest for last three months and had changed several locations and mobile numbers.

The CCI came under the scanner in February this year for accepting two minor girls and releasing them for adoption against the rules of the Juvenile Justice Act 2015.

Danish citizen's search for biological parents in TN brings back saga of child trafficking

HIGHLIGHTS

Mark Madappan Nielsen, 45, underwent nightmarish experiences before he found a home and benevolent parents in Denmark

The family has come to Madurai on one-year visa to narrow down their search around Coimbatore and Trichy

Mark Madappan NielsenMark Madappan Nielsen

MADURAI: At the age of 45, Mark Madappan Nielsen has seen the world enough and witnessed both good and evil. A Danish citizen, Mark now is searching for his biological parents after he was given in adoption to a family in Denmark by an illegal orphanage in Delhi.

Adoptions: illegal immigration and corruption Aibi investigated by the anti-mafia prosecutor's office

Feb. 26Adoptions: illegal immigration and corruption Aibi investigated by the anti-mafia prosecutor's office

CHILDREN'S FRIENDS Premier Paolo Gentiloni, Catholic right-wing leader Carlo Giovanardi and undersecretary Maria Elena Boschi have supported Aibi's return to the Commission for Adoptions

CHILDREN'S FRIENDS Premier Paolo Gentiloni, the Catholic right-wing leader Carlo Giovanardi, the undersecretary Maria Elena Boschi: they promoted the return of Aibi in the world of adoptions

The president of the institution representing the State, Marco Griffini, his wife and daughter are also under investigation for criminal association and maltreatment of minors. A few days ago, Minister Poletti appointed Griffini in the National Council of the Third Sector, as a substitute member of Renzi's "banker". Clash between the Pm and the Court of Milan: the judge denies the wiretapping and the magistrates of the DDA are forced to request archiving. But the opposition of Italian parents, who without their knowledge adopted children torn from their families in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, reopens the case

PRIMA PUNTATA

Maharashtra State initiates probe into child trafficking racket

The department will probe into how the homeopath was able to fabricate adoption papers to run the hospital’s illegal operations.

We are investigating the matter further. He is a doctor of homoeopathy and his wife also works in the same hospital. (Representational image)

We are investigating the matter further. He is a doctor of homoeopathy and his wife also works in the same hospital. (Representational image)

Mumbai: The state women and child department has initiated a probe into the child trafficking racket where the Kolhapur police last week arrested homeopath Dr Arun Patil and his wife for allegedly selling infants to childless couples. According to the department’s district women and child officer (DWCO), it is investigating how Dr Patil was able to run a hospital without any authorisation for the past 25 years. The department will probe into how the homeopath was able to fabricate adoption papers to run the hospital’s illegal operations.

The homeopath was arrested after the DWCO received a tip-off from a couple and the Central Adoption Resources Authority (CARA), along with the police, busted the racket last Tuesday. Investigations by the women and child department and the police have revealed the existence of a joint bank account in the name of the mother of the child and Dr Patil. The account still has Rs 2 lakh paid for the child to the mother.