A Chinese man who sold his infant daughter in order to pay for an iPhone and a motorbike has been handed a three year jail term.
The mother, 'Xiao Mei' (also not her real name) is said to have worked at a series of temporary jobs while her partner spent most of his time browsing at internet cafes.
'A
Duan' (not his real name) from Tong'an, Fujian province, south eastern
China, found a buyer for his 18-day-old child online, according to People's Daily Online.
He met the buyer on the social media network QQ, selling the baby for 23,000 Yuan (roughly $3547.50).
The mother, 'Xiao Mei' (also not her real name) is said to have worked at a series of temporary jobs while her partner spent most of his time browsing at internet cafes.
The
couple met at work back in 2013 and, after plans for their marriage
were shelved with neither party meeting the legal age, their child was
born following an unwanted pregnancy.
Both
parents were 19 at the time and being short of money and finding his
newborn daughter to be a financial burden, A Duan eagerly took up the
opportunity to traffic her off in order to buy the material possessions
he desired.
The
unnamed buyer, who later turned himself into police, purchased the baby
for his sister, in whose possession the child still remains while police
determine the best course of action.
Xiao Mei fled from Tong'an, with the intention of starting a new life.
A
Duan is said to have repeatedly threatened his partner lest she
returned, but she refused and found another job in another city.
However, she was later tracked down and caught by police officers investigating the illegal sale.
Costly life: Duan is reported to have been planning to use the money to buy himself an iPhone and motorbike
According
to reports, she told police: 'I myself was adopted, and many people in
my hometown send their kids to other people to raise them. I really
didn't know that it was illegal.'
As well as giving A Duan a three year sentence, Xiao Mei was handed a suspended sentence of two and a half years according to The Epoch Times.
As
many as 200,000 boys and girls are kidnapped in China every year and
sold openly online, it was estimated last year by Chinese media.
Child
trafficking has been a long-standing problem in China, but despite the
efforts of the authorities, the sinister practice is thriving, leading
to thousands of children being sold.
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