Organ Trafficking : The Red Market
Organ
transplantation is one of the most incredible medical achievements of the past
century. Since the first successful transplants, which took place in the 1950s,
organ transplantation has saved the lives of hundreds of thousands of people worldwide.
The transplantation of healthy organs into persons whose own organs have
failed, improves and saves thousands of lives every year. But demand for organs
has outstripped supply, creating an underground market for illicitly obtained
organs. Organ trafficking, also defined as
‘illegal organ trade’, ‘transplant tourism’ or ‘organ purchase’ describes the
phenomenon of trafficking in persons for the purpose of organ removal, a grim
reality even in the 21st century. A global shortage of organs has driven the
industry, relying on poor populations to be donors and wealthy foreigners to be
recipients.
Organ
Trafficking: The Unseen Form of Human Trafficking
Organ
trafficking, a lucrative global illicit trade, is often a lesser discussed form
of human trafficking among anti-human trafficking stakeholders due to its
intricate and often stealth nature. Trafficking sex and/or labor are the more
commonly thought of forms of human trafficking among public policy leaders and
general awareness campaigns. However, organ trafficking holds a critical place
with transnational organized crime groups due to high demand and relatively low
rates of law enforcement.
Organ traffickers profit in the shadows, while their destructive
medical footprint is the only thing that is felt. It leaves vulnerable
populations, aka “donors,” and first world beneficiaries, aka “recipients,”
open to severe exploitation and a lifetime of health consequences.
Low Supply, High Demand
Over
114,000 people are on the organ wait list in the United States, and a new person
is added every 10 minutes (American Transplant Foundation, 2018). On average,
20 people die every day waiting for an available organ in the United States
alone (American Transplant Foundation, 2018). The legally available organs for
transplant only satisfy about 10% of the global organ transplant need. The long
wait lists and grim results of waiting too long drive a lot of people to
participate in transplant tourism and organ trafficking. Organ trafficking is
the practice of stealing or buying organs through exploitation to be sold on a
black market for profit, and transplant tourism is traveling to another country
for the purpose of buying, selling, or receiving organs.
About INDIA: In India, around 200,000 people need a kidney every year,
but only around 3% of the demand is met, says Dr Sunil Shroff, managing trustee
of the Mohan Foundation, a Chennai-based non-government organization working on
organ donation. “There is a demand and supply problem. Of these 200,000 in need
of a kidney, around 15,000 can afford treatment but only 7,000 of these can
afford transplants," says Shroff. Even if one can afford a transplant, finding a
matching donor is difficult. Besides, under the law, only some people related
to the person in need are allowed to donate, and this further shrinks the
number of prospective organ donors.
Targets of Organ Trafficking
Organ trafficking victims, as with most human trafficking
victims, are generally poor, vulnerable populations. There are rare instances
where victims are put under anesthetic and wake to find their organs missing or
are murdered for their organs. As a whole, coercion of living donors is more
common. It is most common for victims of organ trafficking to be recruited
through brokers, who are individuals who recruit organ suppliers and connect
them with organ recipients. Recruiters/brokers are usually people who may be
from the same communities or ethnicity of a vulnerable population so as to
build trusting relationships easier. The recruiters then make promises to the
organ suppliers like large sums of money or release from debt, and convince
them that the organ is not needed. Specifically, in the case of kidneys, the
most commonly harvested organ from living donors, recruiters will tell victims
that the kidney will grow back, having two kidneys is unnatural, or that they
have a large and a small kidney and removal of the small kidney is harmless.
Victims rarely receive the full amount of money promised, if they receive any
compensation at all. In some cases, the post-removal healthcare costs for a
living organ trafficking victim add to their previous debt and worsen their financial
situation.
Hiding in Plain Sight
Once obtained, trafficked
organs can be transplanted to recipients in the most reputable of hospitals in
major cities throughout the world but makeshift operating rooms in houses have
often been the clandestine locations for such transplants.
Traffickers orchestrate
the recruitment of the donor often from a place of vulnerability, and victims
are not necessarily properly screened for their qualifications to be a healthy
donor. Desperate patients in need of an organ may fall prey to a trafficker who
could be posing as a “reputable” representative of an altruistic organ matching
organization. Financial exploitation plays a key part in both sides of this
scenario. In addition, organ traffickers could also be involved in other forms
of human trafficking, such as sex and/or labor trafficking. Cases are emerging
where an organ donor may have been a victim of sex trafficking and/or labor
trafficking as well as a victim of organ trafficking, creating a multi-level
equation of exploitation. The term “transplant tourism” is often utilized in
describing this crime, as defined by the Declaration of Istanbul:
“…travel for transplantation that involves organ
trafficking and/or transplant commercialism or if the resources (organs,
professionals and transplant centers) devoted to providing transplants to
patients from outside a country undermine the country’s ability to provide
transplant services for its own population.”
Illicit organ trafficking Case Studies in India and Kosovo
INDIA:
The multi-billion rupee Gurgaon
kidney scandal came to light in January 2008 when police arrested several
people for running a kidney transplant racket in Gurgaon,an
industrial township near New Delhi, India. Kidneys from most of the
victims, who were the poor hailing from the nearby western Uttar Pradesh, were
transplanted into clients from the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, Saudi
Arabia and Greece. The police raid was prompted by complaints by the locals
from Moradabad about illegal kidney sales. The man accused of the
scandal, Amit Kumar, was arrested in Nepal on 7 February 2008 and has
denied any hand in criminal activity. According to the Gurgaon police, the
scandal at a local clinic was going on for six to seven years. The donors were
lured with offerings of about Rs. 30,000 for kidney removal. First,
they were lured to the clinic on the pretext of job opportunities. They were
instead asked for donating their kidneys for the fee and all those who resisted
this were drugged against their will and subsequently operated upon.
KOSOVO:
During and after
the 1999 war, accusations were made of people being killed in order to remove
their organs to sell them on the black market. Various sources estimated that
the number of victims ranged from a "handful", up to 50, between
24 to 100 to over 300. The victims were believed to be of Serbian
nationality, killed by perpetrators with strong links to the Kosovo
Liberation Army in 1999. Claims were investigated first by the ICTY
who found medical equipment and traces of blood in and around the house.
They were then investigated by the UN, who received witness reports from many
ex-UK fighters who stated that several of the prisoners had their organs removed.
More
than a dozen countries have agreed to enforce laws to fight trafficking in
human organs, a business that exploits the world’s poorest people and earns
criminals up to $1.2 billion in illegal profits every year. India can be
rightly proud of its status as one of the world’s fastest growing economies but
there’s an infamous label that refuses to go away. Despite the country’s best
efforts to destroy the black market for illegal organ trade, India retains
its reputation as an easy place to buy organs such as kidneys and livers. With
around 60% of its population still living in villages, the practice of organ
donation remains unknown.The worth of this red market in India worth in crores .The
major donors are from rural India who are helpless by their poverty and social
burden.
LAWS AGAINST ORGAN TRAFFICKING:
INDIA:
Before 1994, India had no legislation banning the sale of organs. Low costs and high availability brought in business from around the globe, and transformed India into one of the largest kidney transplant centres in the world. However, several problems began to surface. Patients were often promised payments that were much higher than what they actually received. Other patients reported that their kidneys were removed without their consent after they underwent procedures for other reasons.
Before 1994, India had no legislation banning the sale of organs. Low costs and high availability brought in business from around the globe, and transformed India into one of the largest kidney transplant centres in the world. However, several problems began to surface. Patients were often promised payments that were much higher than what they actually received. Other patients reported that their kidneys were removed without their consent after they underwent procedures for other reasons.
In 1994, the country passed the Transplantation of Human Organs Act
(THOA), banning commerce in organs and promoting posthumous donation of organs. The
law's primary mechanism for preventing the sale of organs was to restrict who
could donate a kidney to another person. In particular, the THOA bars strangers
from donating to one another; a person can only donate to a relative, spouse,
or someone bound by "affection." In practice, though, people evade
the law's restrictions to continue the trade in organs. Often, claims of
"affection" are unfounded and the organ donor has no connection to
the recipient. In many cases, the donor may not be Indian or even speak
the same language as the recipient. There have also been reports of the
donor marrying the recipient to circumvent THOA's prohibition.
THE PHILIPPINES:
Although the sale of organs was not legal in the Philippines, prior
to 2008 the practice was tolerated and even endorsed by the government. The Philippine
Information Agency, a branch of the government, even promoted
"all-inclusive" kidney transplant packages that retailed for roughly
$25,000. The donors themselves often received as little as $2,000 for their
kidneys. The country was a popular destination for transplant tourism. One
high-ranking government official estimated that 800 kidneys were sold annually
in the country prior to 2008, and the WHO listed it as one of the top 5
sites for transplant tourists in 2005.
In March 2008, the government passed new legislation enforcing the ban on
organ sales banned the sale of organs. After the crackdown on the practice, the
number of transplants has decreased from 1,046 in 2007 to 511 in 2010. Since
then, the government has taken a much more active stance against transplant
tourism.
AMERICA:
In the United States, there have been 26
pieces of legislation passed aimed at regulating organ transplanting and
donation (Health Resources and Services Administration . These
regulations range from what constitutes being dead, to what constitutes consent
for organ donation, to national honors for organ donation. In 1984
the United States passed the National Organ Transplant Act (NOTA), which banned
the buying and selling of organs for transplant, created a task force on organ
transplanting, and created an administrative unit in the Department of Health
and Human Services to manage a registry of organ donors and recipients.
MODELS OF LEGALIZATION:
Erin Harris
Model
Ethicists Charles A.
Erin and John Harris have proposed a much more heavily regulated
model for organ transactions. Under this scheme, would-be sellers of organs do
not contract with would-be recipients. Instead, a government agency would be
the sole buyer of organs, paying a standard price set by law and then
distributing the organs to its citizens. This safeguard is designed to prevent
unscrupulous buyers from taking advantage of potential donors and to ensure
that the benefits of the increased organ supply are not limited to the rich.
Moreover, participation in the market would be confined to citizens of the
state where the market is located, to prevent the unilateral movement of organs
from developing nations to the developed world. Erin and Harris's model has
been endorsed by a number of prominent advocates of organ markets.
Free Market Model
Many scholars advocate the
implementation of a free market system to combat the organ shortage
that helps drive illegal organ trade. The organ trade's illegal status creates
a price ceiling for organs at zero dollars. This price ceiling
affects supply and demand, creating a shortage of organs in the face of a
growing demand. According to a report published by the Cato Institute, a
US-based libertarian think tank, eliminating the price ceiling would
eliminate the organ shortage In the Journal of Economic
Perspectives, Nobel laureate Gary Becker and Julio Elias
estimated that a $15,000 compensation would provide enough kidneys for everyone
on the wait list. The government could pay the compensation to guarantee equality.
This would save public money, as dialysis for kidney failure patients is far
more expensive.
CONCLUSION:
With
the growing need of human organs, there is exponential rise in the size of red
market. The organs are sold in the black market which are afforded by riches. The
organs are donated by poor of developing countries who are helpless. In some
cases, the organs are forcibly removed from the suitable donor. Only victims of
this inhuman activities are poor. Many organizations stood up against the crime
but the roots are so deep that they never capture the masterminds. Innocent
lives are ended to fulfill the growing need. This global network illegal market
worth in billions. International laws need to be meant; international organizations
need to be stand to stop this global malpractice.








Great🔥
ReplyDeleteIt's really amazing 🤟
ReplyDeleteNice work....
ReplyDeleteRightly written
ReplyDeleteIts fabulous
ReplyDeleteGreat work...
ReplyDeleteGreat.
ReplyDeleteOrgan trafficking is a major issue that should be addressed.
ReplyDeleteOrgan transplant is a good as well as bad technique. People use them in a good as well as in a bad way. as everything has its Good and bad. But the blog is very good and the matter is quite interactive
ReplyDeleteBy yashika
DeleteGreat Work
ReplyDeleteWith the advancements in technologies humans have reached that statge of intelligence where oragn transplant has become possible. It is a boon for everyone but as it is said that every coin has two faces organ trafficking is one such con which should be dealt with utmost seriousness.
ReplyDeleteAnd no doubt the blog is very informative. Great work guys.