About 100 women were held as slaves at a human egg farm in Georgia, where they received hormones and were treated as cattle.
Their horrible test has been unveiled by three Thai women who were released on January 30 from the claws of the 'Egg Mafia' after being exploited for half a year, Tabloid Bild reports.
The woman said they were being imprisoned on a 'human farm' in the Eastern European country of Georgia by a criminal organization led by Chinese criminals, who sold their eggs on the black market.
They were brought in by a vacancy on Facebook and promised them a salary between 11,500 and 17,000 euros (£ 9,600 to £ 14,100) to work as surrogates for Georgian couples who could not have children.
The trio traveled to Georgia in August 2024 alongside ten other Thai women.
Their costs for the trip and their passport requests were paid by the organization, where a female employee organized their journey.
But once they arrived, they were housed in four major property with about a hundred other women and realized that the work offer was only a front.
Instead, the women with hormones were pumped up to stimulate their ovaries and were forced to have their eggs removed once a month, one of the liberated women told a press conference this week.
Their horrible test has been unveiled by three Thai women who were released on January 30 from the claws of the 'Egg Mafia' after being exploited for half a year. Shown: the women at a press conference in Thailand this week
Instead, the women with hormones were pumped up to stimulate their ovaries and were forced to have their eggs removed once a month. The eggs would then have been sold on the black market
She said they were treated as a cattle and that some women did not even get compensation for their eggs.
If they asked their abductors to leave, they were told that they first had to make up 2000 euros (£ 1,670) for the owners of the farm.
A former slave who worked at the egg cell farm bought her freedom and warned Pava Hongsakula, founder of a Thai foundation for children and women.
The woman said Mrs. Panena that several other Thai women were still held on the farm because they could not afford to pay their release.
The eggs collected from the women are supposed to have been sold in other countries for use in Invitro fertilizers (IVF), said Mrs. Pavena during this week's press conference, according to Bangkok Post.
The Polena Foundation collaborated with Interpol and managed to free the three Thai women who were released on January 30 after paying the ransom.
It is not known how many women are still being held on the 'human farm'.
Thai authorities and Interpol have started an investigation, in which the police in Thailand say that there may be other saves as the case progresses.