Salahuddin
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Pakistan ââ¬â an ââ¬Ëorgan trading hotspotââ¬â¢
By Rauf Klasra
LONDON: The poverty-stricken Pakistanis working at hotels and restaurants in the UK, are now advertising on the Internet sale of their kidneys, liver section, and eye corneas to the rich but ailing Britons at throwaway prices with the offer to facilitate these operations in Rawalpindi.
The Britons are being offered to visit Pakistan for these operations, as trade in human organs is illegal in the United Kingdom.
It has also been reported here that apart from sale of these organs in the UK through the Internet, this facility is available in Pakistan for the rich around the world, particularly the Arabs and the Indians.
Now British nationals are being encouraged to purchase kidneys from the Pakistanis available at very low rates, and for this purpose the Internet is being used to attract potential buyers from the UK market.
Around 5,000 ailing Britons might become potential clients of these poor Pakistanis selling their kidneys through the Internet or brokers, as every year, about 8,000 British nationals need kidney transplants but only 3,000 succeed.
Pakistani doctors in Rawalpindi are part of this illegal trade, as the Britons are being told through websites that in case of a deal, they would be required to visit Pakistan for transplant of these organs.
A British newspaper has traced these Pakistanis willing to sell their organs through Internet advertisements and one of its reporter even struck a deal to buy the organs. He recorded the whole deal with a Pakistani waiter through video camera and posted it on the website of the newspaper that shook the whole of Britain and sent a shocking reminder to the Pakistani community about the worsening socio-economic condition back home.
After these advertisements by some Pakistani waiters, Pakistan has now been termed an "organs trading hotspot".
The Pakistani, willing to sell his organ told the reporter of the British newspaper that he was willing to sell his kidney, liver, etc. Consequently, the reporter disguising as a potential client struck a deal with the advertiser who offered his kidney but with the condition that the operation would take place in Pakistan where he was in contact with some doctors who conduct such operations.
The Sun has splashed on a macabre story about the growing trade in human body parts with an investigation into a website where people from around the world offer their organs for sale. The story was also carried by other major newspapers, like The Guardian and Times, as it was something new for them that now the Pakistanis are also offering their kidneys on the Internet.
The story focuses on a Pakistani waiter from Manchester who signed a contract to sell one of the paper's reporters his kidney, a part of his liver and one of his corneas and said he knew a doctor in Pakistan willing to perform the surgery.
The sale and purchase of live human tissue is illegal in the UK and the US. But the campaign group Organs Watch has identified many countries where the trade flourishes. Every year patients from the rich nations -- including the US and Japan -- buy thousands of organs taken from live donors in the developing countries, such as Mexico and Pakistan.
The Guardian, while commenting on this shocking story, reads: "just days ago, the leader of a political party in Pakistan -- an organs trading hotspot -- called on the countryââ¬â¢s president to outlaw the practice.ââ¬Â
The report has also quoted one Indian newspaper's reports that the village of Yazman, Bahawalpur district, is infamous for kidney sale, with none of its young men believed to have two kidneys. Also this month, Indian police, investigating into a children serial killing, warned that the killing could be linked to the trade which has been outlawed in the country.
The Guardian newspaper reads: ââ¬ÅWith no end in sight to the illegal trade and authorities worldwide seemingly unable to prevent its growth, is it time to consider setting up a legal market in human body parts? ââ¬Â¦ Last year, two US doctors suggested this was both the solution to the shortage of organ donors in the West and the best means of protecting the poor and desperate in developing countries from being mutilated or killed by back-street operations.ââ¬Â
Citizens have to sell there organs inorder to survive, while there leaders live luxurious lives...
By Rauf Klasra
LONDON: The poverty-stricken Pakistanis working at hotels and restaurants in the UK, are now advertising on the Internet sale of their kidneys, liver section, and eye corneas to the rich but ailing Britons at throwaway prices with the offer to facilitate these operations in Rawalpindi.
The Britons are being offered to visit Pakistan for these operations, as trade in human organs is illegal in the United Kingdom.
It has also been reported here that apart from sale of these organs in the UK through the Internet, this facility is available in Pakistan for the rich around the world, particularly the Arabs and the Indians.
Now British nationals are being encouraged to purchase kidneys from the Pakistanis available at very low rates, and for this purpose the Internet is being used to attract potential buyers from the UK market.
Around 5,000 ailing Britons might become potential clients of these poor Pakistanis selling their kidneys through the Internet or brokers, as every year, about 8,000 British nationals need kidney transplants but only 3,000 succeed.
Pakistani doctors in Rawalpindi are part of this illegal trade, as the Britons are being told through websites that in case of a deal, they would be required to visit Pakistan for transplant of these organs.
A British newspaper has traced these Pakistanis willing to sell their organs through Internet advertisements and one of its reporter even struck a deal to buy the organs. He recorded the whole deal with a Pakistani waiter through video camera and posted it on the website of the newspaper that shook the whole of Britain and sent a shocking reminder to the Pakistani community about the worsening socio-economic condition back home.
After these advertisements by some Pakistani waiters, Pakistan has now been termed an "organs trading hotspot".
The Pakistani, willing to sell his organ told the reporter of the British newspaper that he was willing to sell his kidney, liver, etc. Consequently, the reporter disguising as a potential client struck a deal with the advertiser who offered his kidney but with the condition that the operation would take place in Pakistan where he was in contact with some doctors who conduct such operations.
The Sun has splashed on a macabre story about the growing trade in human body parts with an investigation into a website where people from around the world offer their organs for sale. The story was also carried by other major newspapers, like The Guardian and Times, as it was something new for them that now the Pakistanis are also offering their kidneys on the Internet.
The story focuses on a Pakistani waiter from Manchester who signed a contract to sell one of the paper's reporters his kidney, a part of his liver and one of his corneas and said he knew a doctor in Pakistan willing to perform the surgery.
The sale and purchase of live human tissue is illegal in the UK and the US. But the campaign group Organs Watch has identified many countries where the trade flourishes. Every year patients from the rich nations -- including the US and Japan -- buy thousands of organs taken from live donors in the developing countries, such as Mexico and Pakistan.
The Guardian, while commenting on this shocking story, reads: "just days ago, the leader of a political party in Pakistan -- an organs trading hotspot -- called on the countryââ¬â¢s president to outlaw the practice.ââ¬Â
The report has also quoted one Indian newspaper's reports that the village of Yazman, Bahawalpur district, is infamous for kidney sale, with none of its young men believed to have two kidneys. Also this month, Indian police, investigating into a children serial killing, warned that the killing could be linked to the trade which has been outlawed in the country.
The Guardian newspaper reads: ââ¬ÅWith no end in sight to the illegal trade and authorities worldwide seemingly unable to prevent its growth, is it time to consider setting up a legal market in human body parts? ââ¬Â¦ Last year, two US doctors suggested this was both the solution to the shortage of organ donors in the West and the best means of protecting the poor and desperate in developing countries from being mutilated or killed by back-street operations.ââ¬Â
Citizens have to sell there organs inorder to survive, while there leaders live luxurious lives...