Shocking leaked WhatsApp conversations have unraveled a sophisticated human trafficking syndicate aiming for a staggering 400 crore profit, preying on girls at Bihar’s Raxaul border with Nepal. The operation, which feeds victims into sex trade and organ trafficking, operates with corporate-like precision, leaving authorities reeling.
Traffickers deploy agents to ensnare naive young women through fake job offers or romantic lures. Once trapped, detailed profiles are forwarded to handlers: physical measurements, bodily marks, and intimate cycle information, all cataloged meticulously.
One chat captures the brutality: demands for videos amid profit pressures. Payments to agents range from 50,000 to 100,000 rupees per successful delivery, fueling the cycle of exploitation.
Sophisticated evasion tactics include familial codewords for destinations—Mami signals Delhi operations, Mausi Mumbai, Bua Hyderabad, and Didi Ludhiana—allowing seamless coordination under police radar.
According to Raxaul DSP Manish Anand, the modus operandi involves social media grooming, blackmail via explicit videos, and relocation to brothels or surgical tables in major cities. Activist Ranjeet Singh of Swachh Raxaul, credited with saving 600 lives, highlights the dual horrors of sex slavery and organ sales.
Over 100 rescues by local police mark progress, but the syndicate’s scale demands international cooperation. This exposure serves as a stark reminder of the shadows lurking behind innocent online interactions.