How Rural China Forms an Accomplice Network to Control Trafficked Females

How Rural China Forms an Accomplice Network to Control Trafficked Females
Marip Lu sits in her family's shelter in a refugee camp in Kachin State, Burma, on March 21, 2018. Marip Lu, 24, claims she was kidnapped by traffickers and suffered six years of captivity, rape, and abuse deep in China. Esther Htusan/AP
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Commentary

Many analyses blame the Chinese human trafficking industry for the misery of a Xuzhou, China, mother of eight.

He Qinglian
He Qinglian
Author
He Qinglian is a prominent Chinese author and economist. Currently based in the United States, she authored “China’s Pitfalls,” which concerns corruption in China’s economic reform of the 1990s, and “The Fog of Censorship: Media Control in China,” which addresses the manipulation and restriction of the press. She regularly writes on contemporary Chinese social and economic issues.
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