Mentally-impaired women sold as brides in China

October 14, 2015 07:12 pm | Updated 07:12 pm IST - Beijing

In an appalling case of human trafficking in China, a criminal gang bought mentally-impaired women from their families promising to marry them to well-off families but held them in a pigsty in northern China, where they were sold as brides for about USD 1,660 to older men.

Ten women were sold by the gang based in Shandong province over two years, with the buyers paying up to 100,000 yuan (USD 1,660) for each “bride”, Hong Kong-based South China Morning Post reported.

The women were bought from their families in Guangdong province and Guangxi region of south China for 3,000 to 5,000 yuan, with a promise that they would be married to well-off families, the report said citing official Chinese media.

The case was cracked after two men travelling with a mentally-impaired woman on a train from Guangxi to northern China attracted the attention of railway police. The men were arrested and it led officers to the rest of the gang.

One suspect in Shandong, identified only by his surname Sun, would find prospective buyers for the women, mainly men from a poor mountainous area of the province.

He would then alert a middleman who would ask local “matchmakers” to find mentally-impaired women in Guangxi and Guangdong.

“People have little awareness of the law. Not many know that such acts are illegal, not to mention telling the police. The women were usually aged between 20 and 30 years old,” the report said.

They were then brought to Shandong and kept in a pigsty run by Sun to wait for buyers to choose their “brides.” The buyers were mostly older men from poor families, who could not afford a conventional marriage, Sun told the police.

The buyers knew the women were mentally-impaired and only wanted to marry them to have children, Sun said.

“Once you mention a girl would be married into a good family, their parents don’t ask too many questions,” a middleman surnamed Lan told the police.

Mentally disabled girls are considered a burden by their families, Lan said.

Many of the women were also unable to protect themselves and were particularly vulnerable, the report said.

“People have little awareness of the law. Not many know that such acts are illegal, not to mention telling the police,” Wu Yongming, an official at the Jiangxi Federation of Social Sciences, told Xinhua.

The girl’s families were generally indifferent about the fate of their daughters, according to the report. Chinese families, particularly in rural areas, traditionally favour sons. This has led to the most serious gender imbalance in the world, China’s health authorities said earlier this year.

Some pregnant women abort female foetuses and abandon baby daughters because they want to have a son. About 118 boys are born for every 100 girls in China, against a global average of 103 to 107.

Such an imbalance creates a massive market for human trafficking in China among those unable to find wives.

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