Legend Airlines human trafficking: Punjab police starts probe, but no victim to register case yet
The Hindu
The Punjab Police set up a Special Investigation Team to probe a suspected human trafficking case related to Indian passengers on an aircraft run by Romania’s Legend Airlines, originally destined for Nicaragua, but detained in France.
The Punjab Police set up a Special Investigation Team on Saturday to probe a suspected human trafficking case related to Indian passengers on an aircraft run by Romania’s Legend Airlines, originally destined for Nicaragua, but detained in France. Though the passengers have now returned to India, no victim has yet come forward to register any case.
Police sources said that in cases of illegal or irregular migration, victims usually do not register complaints as they have often willingly opted for the so-called ‘donkey route’ to emigrate and are aware of the risks in the process. In fact, victims often strike compromises with the agents accused of facilitating illegal migration and turn hostile or quash the first information report (FIR) in court. Agents based outside India are also difficult to trace, the police sources added.
An A340 Airbus chartered for a flight by a Romanian company named Legend Airlines took off from Fujaiarah in the United Arab Emirates on December 22, headed for Nicaragua in Central America. The flight had a technical stopover at France’s Vatry airport, but was grounded there after the local French administration received an anonymous tip-off about probable ‘human trafficking’. After four days at the Vatry Airport, the flight with 276 passengers was sent to Mumbai on December 26. While 25 passengers chose to apply for asylum in France, two passengers were made assisted witnesses in the French investigation.
Following an initial analysis of the passenger names, the police suspect that around half of those on the flight may belong to the Punjab-Haryana region. To investigate the ‘human trafficking’ matter in depth, the Director of the Bureau of Investigation L.K. Yadav has constituted a four-member SIT, which will submit its final report to the competent court.
A police officer with direct knowledge of the matter said that the State Police was in touch with central agencies, and those from other States as well. The passengers’ destination of Nicaragua in Central America has raised suspicions that they may have been trying to follow the ‘dunki’ or ‘donkey’ route to illegally enter Mexico, and then head further north to the United States, or to Canada, the officer said.
The U.S. government has designated Nicaragua as one of several countries deemed as failing to meet minimum standards for eliminating human trafficking. Nicaragua has also been used as a migratory springboard because of relaxed or visa-free entry requirements. However, Legend Airlines’ lawyer refutes this claim, with the argument that most passengers had valid visas to Nicaragua and return tickets.
A growing number of Indians, especially youth from Punjab, travel abroad in the hope of a better life. The numbers of Police Clearance Certificates (PCC) issued over the past decade by the Punjab police show this trend, with over 10 lakh issued since 2012. The PCC is issued to passport holders in case they have applied for residential status, employment, or long-term visas, or for immigration.
While residents are worried over deaths due to diarrhoea in Vijayawada, officials still grapple to find the root cause. Contaminated drinking water supplied by VMC officials is the reason, insist people in the affected areas, but officials insist that efforts are on to identify the disease and that those with symptoms other than diarrhoea too are visiting the health camps.