Mexico detects cases of trafficking humans for organ removal

Posted on January 22, 2013 • Filed under: Crime, Mexico, Organized Crime

animalpolitico.com reported that between 2008 and 2010, Mexico has detected 320 cases of trafficking for slavery, specifically for sexual exploitation and forced labor subjugation and two cases in which the victims they were excised organs, according to the Report Global Trafficking in Persons Report 2012, published last December by the United Nations Office for Drugs and Crime (UNODC, for its acronym in English). Compiled from official reports that each state presented to the UN, the Global Report notes that human trafficking for the purpose of removal of organs is a crime detected in 16 nations around the world, three of which are in the Americas: Brazil (with 24 officially confirmed cases, and 15 other killings documented by sources), Mexico (two cases) and Bolivia (two cases). Read Article

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