Three 17-year-old students Łužasna agricultural college, hoping to earn their own money, went to Moscow. Sending teenagers abroad carried out by the youth organization "Belarusian Republican Youth Union", which is negotiated with the place of work in Russia, and to draw up documents. As a result, teenagers barely able to return to their homeland, and the case ended with appeal to the prosecutor.
Students are promised 14 000 Russian rubles per month of work, but for my mother to one of the children, the reality turned out differently: minors who that Belarus, which under Russian law could not work full-time, were forced to work overtime and on weekends. Otherwise, the children shouted and threatened to reduce the payment. For the work to be allocated 180 Russian rubles per day (at 20 working days per month is 3600 instead of the promised 14 thousand Russian rubles).
Parents, keeping in touch with the children on the telephone, were in shock: children sent abroad through the government agency, were actually in the labor slavery. Teens have experienced is not very good living conditions. Lack of control over minors by parents guide plunged in horror: drinking alcohol, walking in the city and close communication with the Tajiks not suppressed.
According to the story hit, when one of the students stole all brought home the money, "management" refused to report to the police. It turned out (this is according to the Russian authorities), the children are in their illegal and the documents are registered as passing practices. Vitebsk teenagers do not go to live in such conditions, it was decided to take them home.
Adult brother of one of the boys with the parents' written permission to pick up the minor children overcome many difficulties before returning home. According to the mother of one child, an employee of the "cowboy's office" hid the passports and closed one of the teens. Fortunately, the children are eventually returned to their parents. All three families are aimed at hearing and want the perpetrators accountable for their actions under the law.
Anya Scherbitskaya, vkurier.by