The Chinese Embassy in Bogota, Colombia, is looking into an immigration case
involving the detention of 101 Chinese nationals in two separate raids in the
nearby town of Zipaquira.
Chinese nationals, escorted by Colombian police,in Zipaquira,
30 km north of the country's capital of Bogota. Police have said 42 of the
101 Chinese detained entered Columbia legally. [AFP]
|
"After getting the information on
Monday night, we planned to send our embassy staff to the police station (in
Zipaquira, 30 km north of Bogota) where the Chinese have been detained, but we
were told to go there on Tuesday morning (local time) because the Colombian
officer in charge of the case would not be available at night," an embassy staff
told China Daily yesterday.
"One of the problems is that the Colombian police and the detained Chinese
cannot communicate because of the language barrier."
"We are waiting to meet the 101 Chinese and help them communicate with
police," the embassy staff said.
Acting on a tip-off, the Colombian police found the Chinese immigrants in
overcrowded rooms with dirty mattresses and floors.
"The house was locked from outside so that they could not leave," government
secretary in Zipaquira Edgar Castillo said.
Twenty-one of the 42 held in the first raid had entered Colombia legally.
They had a 15-day tourist visa and reached Bogota on an Air France flight from
Italy on March 30 and 31, said Castillo, who had checked their passports.
But none of the 59 detained in the second raid were carrying any documents,
he said. Although none has been formally arrested, police are interrogating a
Costa Rican national who visited the house where the Chinese had been staying
soon after the first police raid, said Colonel Wilson Laverde, police commander
of Cundinamarca.
The Chinese government has a clear stance on combating illegal migration in
all forms and has taken effective measures to curb such activities.
China will accept the return of its citizens declared illegal immigrants once
their identities are confirmed.