Sicily, Italy (CNN)The
13-year old boy looks off into the distance. He is slight of build with
pale, almost yellowy eyes. When you see him you feel as if he has seen
far too much already.
He is
carrying a burden far too heavy for his age -- but despite his ordeal so
far, smuggled across continents from Africa to Europe, and now living
in a care home, his future could be far worse depending which route he
takes next.
A CNN investigation spent
months retracing the children's journey from Egypt to Italy. Speaking to
social workers and authorities, children and parents, there is evidence
that many of the children were smuggled into Italy by the same criminal
networks, who once they are in country, use them for illegal
activities.
The Egyptian government
agency charged with advising lawmakers on child protection matters told
CNN that they believe in some cases the parents are guilty of
trafficking, paying for their own vulnerable children to be smuggled so
far from home in the hope of securing the family's future.
We were interviewing this Egyptian boy and his friends in the picturesque piazza of a small Sicilian town.
They came over to Italy together on an Egyptian smuggler ship. He was 12 at the time and crammed in with hundreds of others.
He
says his parents paid 35,000 Egyptian pounds (about $4,500) for the
privilege, never guessing what it would really be like -- tossed around
for nine days, surrounded by vomit, and scared, uncertain what would
meet them on shore.
source: www.cnn.com
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