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UP EXPLOSION: Indian Youths SOLD in Bangkok for $4,500 Each! Chinese Cyber Mafia Exposed — 50+ Indians Trafficked Abroad

A shocking human trafficking racket has been blown open in Uttar Pradesh.
Indian youths — desperate for jobs — are being sold like cattle to Chinese cybercrime syndicates operating in Bangkok, Cambodia, and Vietnam.

Police have now confirmed that two youths from Kanpur and one from Agra were sold for $4,500 (₹3.75 lakh) each to Chinese gangsters.

The mastermind, Aamir Khan Sarguru, was nabbed from Maharashtra and dragged to Agra on remand. His confession has stunned investigators — he admitted to sending more than 50 Indian youths abroad to work as slaves for Chinese cyber criminals.

These gangs run fake online businesses and force the trafficked Indians to cheat people under threat, torture, and captivity.

“They promised us jobs. But they sold us to Chinese fraudsters,” said Akhil from Malpura, one of the rescued victims.

Akhil, lured with a fake hotel job, paid ₹4.5 lakh, was sent to Bangkok, and then trafficked to Cambodia. There, he was beaten and forced to scam people online until he emailed the Indian Embassy for help.
After 16 days of hell, he was rescued — along with two others from Kanpur.


The Racket That Shamed the Nation

  • Chinese cyber mafia buying Indian youths for $4,500 each.

  • Agents in UP, Punjab, and MP collect ₹3–4.5 lakh per person.

  • Victims forced into cyber fraud and digital slavery.

  • Over 22 rescued, at least 50 confirmed trafficked.

  • Agents include ex-Merchant Navy officers now working for Chinese handlers.


Police Crackdown Intensifies

UP Cyber Cell and Cyber Crime Police say the gang’s roots run deep across India.
Arrests have already been made in Indore, Unnao, and Ratnagiri, and more high-profile names are expected to fall soon.

Investigators are calling it India’s biggest cyber trafficking operation ever exposed.


The Hard Truth

Our young men, dreaming of jobs abroad, are being auctioned to Chinese fraud rackets — turned into digital slaves for cybercrime empires.
The government says a nationwide probe has begun.
But for many victims, the damage is already done.

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