Advertisement

German police step up fight against Vietnamese human traffickers

AFP
AFP - [email protected]
German police step up fight against Vietnamese human traffickers
The Dong Xuan Center in Lichtenberg. Photo: DPA

German federal police said Mondaythey were stepping up European cross-border cooperation to fight Vietnamesehuman trafficking, after Berlin became a key hub in a network of exploitationin service industries.

Advertisement

Lured by jobs in Europe, Vietnamese migrants are smuggled illegally often through China or Russia, Carsten Moritz, head of the human trafficking unit of
the Federal Criminal Police Office (BKA), told public broadcaster RBB.

Arrivals from Vietnam frequently work under "exploitative conditions" to
pay off smuggling debts, which cost around 10,000 to 20,000 per person.

A "huge network" that is "active all over Europe" is behind trafficking from Vietnam, according to the BKA, generating "enormous sums" for criminals.

Advertisement

A Europe-wide operation will be launched this year to tackle the problem initiated by the BKA and bringing in police from countries including Poland, Britain, the Netherlands, Austria, Switzerland, the Czech Republic and Belgium as well as EU law enforcement agency Europol.

Police have previously found migrants -- including minors -- illegally working in massage parlours, nail salons and restaurants, as well as the textile and cleaning industry.

READ ALSO: What Germany's controversial new immigration laws mean for foreign workers

The eastern Berlin district of Lichtenberg, home to the Dong Xuan Center, one of Germany's largest Asian markets, is of central importance, Moritz said.

In March last year, German police carried out a series of raids against
suspected Vietnamese traffickers and arrested six in relation to charges of smuggling 155 Vietnamese people to Germany.

People who choose to make the perilous journey to Europe often endure appalling conditions.

In 2019, 39 Vietnamese migrants were found dead in a refrigerated truck in Britain shortly after it had crossed the Channel from mainland Europe.

The ringleader Gheorghe Nica was arrested in Frankfurt in January 2020 on a
European Arrest Warrant and later convicted in London of 39 counts of
manslaughter.

Another suspected leader in the smuggling, a 29-year-old nicknamed "the
Bald Duke", was arrested in Germany in May, sources told AFP at the time.

There are around 188,000 people of Vietnamese descent in Germany, according
to official statistics.

Many Vietnamese came as so-called guest workers to communist East Germany, staying after the fall of the Berlin Wall.

Others are descended from the "boat people" who arrived in West Germany after fleeing their homeland at the end of the Vietnam War.

READ ALSO: Police bust Vietnamese human-trafficking ring

More

Join the conversation in our comments section below. Share your own views and experience and if you have a question or suggestion for our journalists then email us at [email protected].
Please keep comments civil, constructive and on topic – and make sure to read our terms of use before getting involved.

Please log in to leave a comment.

See Also