Indian police widen probe into politicians’ links to child trafficking

Indian Crime Investigation Department (CID) officials escort Chandana Chakraborty from CID office in Siliguri on March 4, 2017, towards an appearance at a court in Jalpaiguri in the eastern Indian state of West Bengal, after her arrest as part of an alleged child trafficking scandal. (AFP)
Updated 08 March 2017
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Indian police widen probe into politicians’ links to child trafficking

KOLKATA: Police in eastern India are investigating two more senior members of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s ruling party as a probe into politicians’ involvement in the trafficking and selling of children for adoption widened on Tuesday.
West Bengal State police said they planned to question two senior lawmakers of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) following the arrest of a BJP party member on Feb. 28.
Juhi Chowdhury, a leader in the BJP women’s wing, is being held on charges relating to the trafficking of at least 17 children from state-funded orphanages and shelters in Jalpaiguri district who were sold to couples in India and abroad.
Investigating officers said Chowdhury had met senior ministers, politicians and government officials to get licenses and grants required to run the child care homes and shelters.
Chowdhury denies the charges.
Six other people arrested include an orphanage owner, two government child protection officers, a member of the state-appointed child welfare committee and a doctor, police said.
“The arrested people in the child trafficking case have named influential people and we have recovered supporting and corroborative evidence,” said Rajesh Kumar, Additional Director-General of Police in West Bengal’s Criminal Investigation Department (CID).
Chowdhury says the move is politically motivated. The BJP has suspended Chowdhury from the party.
Kumar said the CID was an independent agency acting on the basis of evidence, not politics.
More than 40 percent of human trafficking cases in India in 2015 involved children being bought, sold and exploited as modern-day slaves, according to latest government crime data.
There has been a recent spate of reports of the trafficking of infants and children for adoption through charity-run child homes and private hospitals.
On Tuesday, police in Mumbai charged six people with selling babies to childless couples across India after smashing a trafficking scam.
In West Bengal, police accused Chowdhury of having a network of contacts running orphanages and shelters in Jalpaiguri district where they identified children for illegal adoption.
The homes used forged documents, fake stamps and birth certificates to sell children, for 100,000-200,000 rupees ($1,500 to $3,000) each, police said.
Police said over six months they had found 17 cases of trafficked children aged between one and 14 years old and investigations are continuing.


End of US-Russia nuclear pact a ‘grave moment’: UN chief

Updated 05 February 2026
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End of US-Russia nuclear pact a ‘grave moment’: UN chief

  • Guterres urged Washington and Moscow “to return to the negotiating table without delay and to agree upon a successor framework”

UNITED NATIONS, United States: UN chief Antonio Guterres on Wednesday urged the United States and Russia to quickly sign a new nuclear deal, as the existing treaty was set to expire in a “grave moment for international peace and security.”
The New START agreement will end Thursday, formally releasing both Moscow and Washington from a raft of restrictions on their nuclear arsenals.
“For the first time in more than half a century, we face a world without any binding limits on the strategic nuclear arsenals of the Russian Federation and the United States of America,” Guterres said in a statement.
The UN secretary-general added that New START and other arms control treaties had “drastically improved the security of all peoples.”
“This dissolution of decades of achievement could not come at a worse time — the risk of a nuclear weapon being used is the highest in decades,” he said, without giving more details.
Guterres urged Washington and Moscow “to return to the negotiating table without delay and to agree upon a successor framework.”
Russia and the United States together control more than 80 percent of the world’s nuclear warheads but arms agreements have been withering away.
New START, first signed in 2010, limited each side’s nuclear arsenal to 1,550 deployed strategic warheads — a reduction of nearly 30 percent from the previous limit set in 2002.
It also allowed each side to conduct on-site inspections of the other’s nuclear arsenal, although these were suspended during the Covid-19 pandemic and have not resumed since.