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Over 2,000 illegal immigrants held in China this year

Police in China's southern Guangdong Province today said they had captured over 2,000 migrants who illegally crossed the border this year, up 47 per cent year on year.

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Police in China's southern Guangdong Province today said they had captured over 2,000 migrants who illegally crossed the border this year, up 47 per cent year on year.

The police handled more than 120 illegal immigration cases in collaboration with counterparts in neighboring regions, up 20 per cent compared with the same period last year, said Jiang Mingxiang, deputy chief of the province's border police.

"Over 1,800 of the illegal migrants were foreigners, mostly from Southeast Asian countries," Jiang said, adding that they attempted to sneak into coastal areas of Guangdong or Hong Kong to work.

"Most foreign stowaways are young or middle-aged people who attempted to seek jobs in factories in the Pearl River Delta or western Guangdong," said Sun Huiyuan, another border police officer.

"Most of the factories are labour-intensive plants that feel the pressure to cut labor costs amid a labor shortage," Sun was quoted as saying by state-run Xinhua news agency.

"The main purpose of the illegal workers is to earn money, but they could also commit crimes such as theft, robbery and drug trafficking to disrupt border management and social order," said Zhao Quanhong, another senior official with the province's border police.

The human smuggling rings were highly organised, with foreign brokers recruiting immigrants and their Chinese accomplices transferring and securing jobs for them, Xinhua said.

In one case, Guangdong and Guangxi police cracked a gang helping Southeast Asians illegally work in the two regions, capturing eight brokers, two factory managers and over 80 illegal migrants.

Local border police have stepped up cooperation with counterparts in Hong Kong, Macao and several other neighboring regions in cracking down on human trafficking.

 

(This article has not been edited by DNA's editorial team and is auto-generated from an agency feed.)

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