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Bangladesh arrests sex trafficking suspects who lured women on TikTok

by Naimul Karim | @naimonthefield | Thomson Reuters Foundation
Friday, 4 June 2021 11:27 GMT

ARCHIVE PHOTO: The logo of TikTok application is seen on a screen in this picture illustration taken February 21, 2019. REUTERS/Danish Siddiqui/Illustration

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A video of a Bangladeshi woman being tortured and sexually assaulted went viral on social media last week, prompting the investigation by police

By Naimul Karim

DHAKA, June 4 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Police in Bangladesh have arrested seven suspected members of a sex trafficking gang that used video-sharing app TikTok to contact and lure young women and girls before selling them for sex in neighbouring India, an official said on Friday.

A video of a Bangladeshi woman being tortured and sexually assaulted went viral on social media last week, prompting the investigation by police, who said the traffickers had enticed the women with promises of well-paid jobs across the border.

"These girls are mostly from lower-income groups. They are told they'll become stars in India. They are also promised jobs in malls. But these were lies," said Mohammad Shahidullah, the police official investigating the case.

"Their dreams are shattered once they cross the border. That's when they are tortured and forced to have sex in different hotels. The traffickers take videos of them and threaten to release those in case they resist," he added.

The suspected "coordinator" of the trafficking ring was arrested last week in India - where police said the viral video had been filmed, while the seven new arrests took place in Bangladesh this week.

Shahidullah said officers were still trying to find out how many women had been trafficked by the gang.

"One of the arrested individuals told us he sent at least 1,000 people across the border ... We still don't know if that's true," he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

The woman who was filmed in the video is currently in Indian police custody.

Bangladesh is one of the world's largest exporters of labour and its citizens are encouraged to look for jobs abroad, but because its recruitment system depends mostly upon informal brokers, trafficking is a risk, activists say.

The South Asian nation, which has a backlog of about 4,500 human trafficking-related cases and a poor conviction rate, opened special courts last year to speed up progress on such cases.

Traffickers in Bangladesh have traditionally targeted people offline, but activists say that they have seen a surge in the number of cases in the last two years where victims were duped through people they met on the social media.

"This case has revealed a new recruitment pattern. It tells us that we need to revise and redesign our anti-trafficking interventions," said Tariqul Islam, country director of the anti-slavery non-profit Justice & Care.

"We need to make people more cautious about who they meet through apps," he added.

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(Reporting by Naimul Karim @Naimonthefield; Editing by Helen Popper. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers the lives of people around the world who struggle to live freely or fairly. Visit http://news.trust.org)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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