Europe: Trafficking fears over thousands of missing migrant children

Europe: Trafficking fears over thousands of missing migrant children
An estimated 10,000 migrant children have gone missing across Europe warned the EU police agency on Monday, amid fear the minors are at risk of being abused and trafficked.
3 min read
02 February, 2016
There are growing fears that migrant children are being exploited [AFP]

Ten thousand unaccompanied migrant children are missing in Europe amid fears that organised crime gangs are beginning to exploit the vulnerable youngsters, a senior official at the European Union's police agency said Monday.

Europol Chief of Staff Brian Donald said that the figure "would be a conservative estimate across all the countries that are dealing with this migrant crisis" over the past 12-18 months.

Donald said the estimate of 10,000 missing was based on reports by law enforcement authorities, governments and non-governmental organisations.

"They're lost in the system," he said of the minors. "I think our concern is that we know that there are people out there who will exploit minors. We know there are people who will take them and use them for their own purposes."

Sweden, a popular destination for migrants, already is aware of the problem.

The Stockholm county government released a report last week citing Swedish Migration Agency statistics that said 1,900 of the 55,000 unaccompanied minors who have applied for asylum in Sweden in the past six years disappeared.

The whereabouts of 1,250 of those is still unclear. About 88 percent of those who went missing are boys.

About 88 percent of those who went missing are boys

"There is very little information about what happens after they disappear. These children are particularly vulnerable to being exploited in various ways," the report said.

Amir Hashemi-Nik of the Stockholm County Administration said some of those who disappear are believed to be in the grip of human-trafficking rings and end up in prostitution, begging or other criminal activities.

Some disappear simply because they don't like the place where they have been assigned and decide to leave, others go when they approach their 18th birthday because they are worried it will be harder to get asylum.

North African boys are particularly likely to go underground because, unlike Syrians or Afghans, they are unlikely to get asylum.

"Many of them have lived on the streets in many other countries before coming to Sweden," said the Swedish report. "Many of these children become involved in crime.

Of the 150,000 migrants and refugees rescued at sea and brought to Italy in 2015, accompanied minors accounted for 12,360, according to the UNHCR office in Rome.

UNHCR official spokeswoman Carlotta Sami said there is no firm figure on just how many of those have slipped away or might have been exploited.

"More than disappeared, they are on the move," often trying to reach relatives or other contacts in northern Europe, not wanting to stay in Italy, Sami said. "There is no certainty where they are" or if they ever reached their destination.

Save the Children Italy spokesman Michele Prosperi said that Europol, "sounded an alarm that is based on a real risk" because thousands of minors don't stay within the system of migrant protection.

"They find themselves in a very vulnerable condition, and can be subject to violence or pressure," Prosperi said.

They look at the traffickers not as a threat but as people who are trying to help them finish their journey, he added, and are very reluctant to tell anything about their treatment to aid workers or officials in Italy for fear that their plans to continue onward will be jeopardised.