US man charged
with sexual abuse of Nepali boys amid fears trafficking rising
Police in Nepal have charged an American man of luring boys from
villages and taking them to the capital for sex, an official said on Monday
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Police in Nepal have charged an American man of luring boys from
villages and taking them to the capital for sex, an official said on Monday,
amid concerns that last year’s devastating earthquakes have caused a spike in
human trafficking.
The Central Investigation Bureau (CIB) official said Kenneth Joseph
Coombs, 48, was arrested on Friday at a hotel in Thamel, a popular tourist
district in Kathmandu, where eight boys aged between 12 and 16 were with him.
Nawaraj Silwal, CBI Deputy Inspector General, said police rescued the
children from a hotel in the centre of the city after their parents reported
them as missing. “He (Coombs) has been charged with child sex abuse and a court
has remanded him to police custody,” Silwal told the Thomson Reuters
Foundation. “He would force (the children) to do everything a paedophile does.”
A Nepali associate was also arrested and charged under similar crimes,
said police, who seized a laptop, camera and mobile phone at the scene.
Child welfare officials they were not surprised by the arrests as there
has been a surge in human trafficking cases following devastating earthquakes
in April and May last year that killed almost 9,000 people in the Himalayan
nation.
Silwal said Coombs and his Nepali associate had allegedly lured the
children from impoverished villages around Kathmandu with the promise of good
jobs, clothes and food, but instead they were enslaved, exploited and raped.
Lawyers representing the two men were not immediately available for
comment. An official at the U.S. Embassy said the embassy could provide details
due to issues related to privacy.
Coombs, described as an app developer from Illinois, was a frequent
visitor to Nepal, said Silwal.
Last year’s earthquakes left hundreds of thousands of families homeless
and raised concerns among rights groups that trafficking rings would take
advantage of the vulnerable.
Nepali officials say more than 40,000 children either lost their
parents, were injured, or were placed in a precarious situation following the
disaster.
“There were increased incidences of
trafficking in children after the earthquake last year, but we do not know many
cases of sexual abuse like this,” said Tarak Dhital, head of the government’s
Central Child Welfare Board. “Disasters like earthquakes make children
vulnerable to such crimes. We have to be alert against this.”
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