In a major breakthrough, Bihar police have cracked open an international trafficking racket at the Raxaul border, where criminals plotted to rake in 400 crore by selling girls into unimaginable horrors. Leaked chats paint a picture of calculated cruelty, from body measurements to blackmail videos.
The syndicate transforms the India-Nepal frontier into a conveyor belt of despair. Girls are deceived with dreams of employment or romance, then appraised like livestock—height, weight, scars, even periods tracked in coded messages.
Handlers bark orders: measure precisely, send proof. Agents pocket 50k-1 lakh per girl, part of a network spanning cities, disguised by code names like Mami (Delhi), Mausi (Mumbai), Bua (Hyderabad), Didi (Ludhiana).
DSP Manish Anand details the trap: social media seduction leads to coerced videos, followed by sales to urban flesh markets or organ harvesters. Ranjeet Singh’s NGO has pulled 600 girls from this abyss, while police tally over 100 rescues.
The chats’ raw ambition—’400 crore and no videos?’—exposes profit over humanity. As investigations deepen, calls grow for tech platforms to aid in tracing these digital predators. This case highlights the perilous intersection of borders and the internet in modern slavery.