A multinational human smuggling empire, fixated on a 400 crore windfall, has been laid bare through incriminating WhatsApp exchanges at Bihar’s Raxaul crossing. Victims face prostitution or worse, their lives commodified in meticulous digital ledgers.
Agents prowl for trusting girls, using affection or opportunity as bait. Handlers receive exhaustive dossiers: vital stats, tattoos, monthly cycles—all to maximize resale value in shadowy markets.
Profits are king, as one message fumes over missing videos amid revenue shortfalls. Recruiters score 50,000-100,000 rupees per catch, routed through a web of pseudonyms: Delhi’s Mami, Mumbai’s Mausi, Hyderabad’s Bua, Ludhiana’s Didi.
Raxaul’s DSP Manish Anand unmasks the scheme—online grooming, extortionate recordings, dispatch to city underworlds or illegal clinics. Swachh Raxaul’s Ranjeet Singh, savior of 600 souls, decries the organ trade angle, with police adding 100+ rescues to the tally.
This revelation demands fortified borders, AI-driven chat surveillance, and victim support systems. The syndicate’s exposure is a victory, but the fight against such organized evil persists, urging society to safeguard its daughters.
