European police arrest ‘high-value’ smugglers accused of trafficking Afghans, Pakistanis, Syrians

Armed police forces take up positions during an operation in Hamburg, northern Germany, on February 1, 2022. (AFP/File)
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  • A German Federal Police-led task force also arrested 126 accomplices of smugglers, mainly in Austria
  • The suspects used cargo bays of lorries, closed vans and personal cars to move migrants from Turkey

ISLAMABAD: European police said on Friday they had arrested eight “high-value” human smugglers and dismantled a huge network accused of transporting some 10,000 people, mainly Afghan, Pakistani and Syrian migrants, to Europe. 

A German Federal Police-led task force involving Austria, Hungary, Romania, Serbia and the Netherlands also arrested 126 accomplices, mainly in Austria, the EU’s police agency Europol said. 

Europol, which coordinated the operation launched in August last year, described the “migrant smuggling kingpins” as “highly dangerous.” 

“These Europol high-value targets, mainly Syrian nationals, had global connections in source, transit and destination countries,” The Hague-based agency said on its website. 

“The investigative leads revealed that the targets facilitated the smuggling of at least 10,000 migrants, who are mainly of Afghan, Pakistani and Syrian origin, to the EU.” 

The operation last year detected 916 “smuggling incidents,” carried out 151 house searches and seized almost one million euros in assets, it added. 

The smugglers used cargo bays of lorries, closed vans and personal cars to move migrants from Turkey through the Western Balkans region, Romania and Hungary toward Austria, Germany and the Netherlands. 

The suspects were charging between 4,000 euros ($4,300) to 10,000 euros ($10,730) to transport migrants across Europe’s borders “in extremely poor and often life-threatening conditions,” Europol said. 

The smugglers advertised their services on social media platforms “to convince the migrant’s relatives that it was safe” and often used short videos to “sell their supposedly safe smuggling services.” 

Payments were mainly made via the hawala underground financial system, an informal network of money transfers through face-to-face transactions that is far more difficult to trace than bank transfers. 

German Federal Police said they were still hunting another six key suspects.