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Europol arrests 77 suspects involved in trafficking of Kosovars (Lajmi)

With the support of Europol and Eurojust and nearly 400 law enforcement officers, 77 individuals suspected of large-scale irregular migrant smuggling from Kosovo to the EU have been arrested in Austria, the Czech Republic, France, Germany, Hungary, Slovakia and Kosovo. Law enforcement and judicial authorities of the countries involved, supported by Europol, Eurojust and Switzerland, dismantled the organised criminal network which was mainly made up of individuals originating from Kosovo, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Serbia, Bosnia Herzegovina and the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia. The criminal network recruited irregular migrants in Kosovo and organised their illegal entry into the EU. The migrants typically travelled to Serbia on their own where they made contact with facilitators, who subsequently smuggled them into Hungary by crossing the green border. Upon their arrival in Hungary, the irregular migrants were handled by another cell of the same criminal network. In many cases, the migrants claimed asylum in Hungary prior to being smuggled onwards to their final destinations in Switzerland, Italy, Germany and France. For their journeys across Europe, migrants were smuggled in vehicles travelling through Slovakia, the Czech Republic, Germany and Austria. The migrants paid the facilitators using Western Union or MoneyGram transfers as well as cash. The facilitators charged around EUR 2800 per person or EUR 7000 for a whole family to organise a trip from Kosovo to France. In addition to the arrests of 46 facilitators yesterday (8 in Austria, 16 in the Czech Republic, 12 in France, 1 in Germany, 4 in Hungary, 3 in Kosovo and 2 in Slovakia), previous operations with links to the current investigation resulted in the arrest of 8 members of the same organised criminal network in Austria, 13 in Kosovo, 7 in Hungary and 3 in Germany. During searches, law enforcement authorities confiscated several vehicles, mobile phones, SIM cards, computers, hard drives, forged travel documents, various bank or supporting documents and more than EUR 52 000 in cash.