Human Trafficking: Children from Macedonia Given Up for Adoption in Greece

In 2006, a woman from the Macedonian town of Gevgelija sold her child and put it up for adoption in Greece, but then changed her mind.

This weekend, an organized group selling Bulgarian children in Greece has been arrested. In the police operation, four persons from Bulgaria were apprehended, who belonged to a network stealing and selling children. A fifteen-month-old baby was given for adoption at a price of EUR 6,500, but it was soon found and returned to the biological mother.

The latest similar case in Macedonia was registered several years ago, when a woman from Gevgelija sold her newborn child in Greece.


"The case dates back to 2006, when a Roma woman from Gevgelija gave her baby up for adoption in Greece. The entire case and papers were notary verified. She then reported the case to the police, but in cooperation with the Greek authorities, it was established that the child cannot be given back since the woman already gave up the baby," says Kiro Todorovski, national rapporteur on human trafficking and illegal migration in Macedonia.

According to the latest report of the national rapporteur, there have been cases with trafficking of underage girls, used for marriage and sexual or labor exploitation.

"The number of underage victims in Macedonia tends to rise. In 2013, nine of the 15 children were underage," the report reads.

The report also reveals that children coming from poor or marginalized ethnic minorities, families with limited resources, dysfunctional ones or families with socio-pathological problems are among the riskiest groups.

"There have been indications that child beggars are potential human trafficking victims, but we cannot prove it is done by an organized group,: says Maja Varoslija of the Otvorena porta (Open Gate) association that works against violence and human trafficking.

Deputy Ombudsman of Macedonia, Vaska Bajramovska-Mustafa, says a child trafficking case has not been registered so far. She doesn't want to stigmatize a certain group that might be involved in such activities, but points out that a child beggar is highly likely to become a trafficking victim.

"We regularly visit elementary and high schools to hold lectures about the risks children are exposed to," Bajramovska-Mustafa says.

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