PUT IN CUSTODY

Dutch arrested in Nairobi, deported over human smuggling

Habeta was wanted by Interpol since 2017

In Summary
  • He had been hiding in Nairobi where he is said to have been conducting his business. 
  • Police acted on a request from Interpol to arrest and deport him on Christmas Day.
John Habeta in past photo-Handout
John Habeta in past photo-Handout

Kenyan detectives arrested and deported a Dutch man who was wanted for smuggling dozens of men, women and children to Europe.

Wanted by the Netherlands since 2017, 53-year-old John Habeta was arrested in Nairobi on December 16 and stayed in custody until Christmas Day when he was deported to Netherlands.

Officials said this was part of a sting operation coordinated between authorities in the Netherlands and Kenya with the support of Interpol.

Acting on globally sourced Interpol intelligence leads, the National Central Bureau in The Hague alerted the Kenyan NCB to the fugitive’s presence in Nairobi on December 10.  

An Interpol Red Notice—or international fugitive alert—was published the same day for people smuggling and use of fake identity documents to carry out transcontinental smuggling operations, triggering the suspect’s surveillance and arrest on the outskirts of the Kenyan capital.

The Dutch remains in custody in Netherlands until trial where, if convicted, he faces a sentence of up to eight years in prison.

Habeta who is originally from Eritrea was allegedly involved in at least four different operations to smuggle groups of Eritreans into Europe using routes from Asia.

Interpol’s specialised unit on migrant smuggling and human trafficking identified Habeta as a high priority target in October 2020 when member countries alerted the agency to new leads about the fugitive’s global smuggling activities, which were immediately shared with the NCB in The Hague.

The subsequent issue of the Red Notice played a central role in the location and arrest of the fugitive.

People smuggling syndicates are run like businesses with high profit margins and links to a wide range of serious and often violent crimes including illicit money flows, corruption, terrorism, trafficking in illicit goods and human trafficking.  

The Interpol says they focus on profit margins, facilitating the passage of migrants with little or no regard for their safety and well-being.

Criminal groups behind human trafficking and migrant smuggling were already hit last July when Interpol's operation Liberterra saw 286 suspects arrested worldwide.

In April, Operation Weka mobilised 24 source, transit and destination countries enabling authorities in Africa and Europe to rescue nearly 500 victims of human trafficking and identify some 760 irregular migrants.

Both operations boosted regional law enforcement cooperation into people smuggling and triggered associated police investigations in all continents into targets like Habeta.

This latest investigation was supported by The Regional Operational Centre in support of the Khartoum Process and the African Union Horn of Africa Initiative and Europol.

 

 

 

-Edited by SKanyara

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