It is not just India.............China as well..............as well as here in this "great" "country" which is really an abomination of a nation..............was well as just about every other country.............Nigerians are selling out Nigeria..................People from Zaire,,,,,,,,,,now Congo,,,,,,,,,sold out thier own country.......it is the same all over............the missing kids u see on milk cartoons here in the USA end up in underground cities........the bases for these alien vampires...................the us government knows about all this, as well as those other governments..............
Follow @TIME
Shocked but not surprised. That might be the best way to sum up
India's reaction to the revelation this week that a black market organ
transplant ring had been harvesting kidneys from poor Indian laborers,
sometimes against their wishes, and using them in foreigners desperate
for transplants. Police who busted the ring last week say doctors paid
as little as $1000 for the kidneys and then sold them for as much as
$37,500. The racket, based in Gurgaon, a business center close to the
capital, New Delhi, drew victims from as many as eight Indian states and
lasted for almost a decade. Police say the black market doctors may
have illegally transplanted as many as 500 kidneys. The ring, according
to the police, was run by two Indian brothers, neither of whom had any
medical training but who oversaw the surgery. One of the brothers has
been arrested in Mumbai, but the other, Amit Kumar, who police say was
the racket's kingpin, is now the focus of an international manhunt and
may have fled to Canada.
But while the details of this particular case are appalling, and the
scam is the first — or at least first to be exposed — involving
foreigners from as far away as the U.S. and U.K flying in for
transplants, Indians are sadly all too familiar with organ rackets. In
2007, police in southern India uncovered an illegal kidney trade
involving fishermen whose jobs had been destroyed by the Indian Ocean
tsunami. A massive transplant ring in Punjab was also uncovered in 2003.
Police there believe at least 30 of the donors, who as in this latest
case were poor, illiterate workers promised riches for their organs and
bused in to be operated on, died, despite promises that they would
receive excellent post-operation medical care and that they had nothing
to worry about.
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