AsiaNews.it: Rules on transplants will not stop organs trade
March 29, 2006 99% of organs come from people condemned to death. The government is seeking
to regulate one of the most profitable forms of trafficking that draws in
prisons, police, courts and doctors. Beijing (AsiaNews) -- The Health Ministry has launched a series of rules
governing the sale and transplanting of human organs, extremely widespread
practices in China that are subject to corruption and abuses. The regulations will enter into force on July 1. They stipulate that each and
every transplant should be carried out by qualified doctors in hygienically
sound and technically well-equipped environments. They also list specific
conditions for taking organs from live donors. But experts say the new rules do
not resolve the crucial problem of illegal trade in organs. China now ranks second worldwide in numbers of organ transplants carried out.
Each year, doctors undertake some 7 to 8,000 operations, especially on rich
people coming from Hong Kong, Japan and Korea. The trade is flourishing although
most people who received transplants died within one or two years. The average
cost of a kidney transplant is of 65,000 US dollars; a liver can cost up to
157,000 dollars. Operation costs increase by around 10,000 dollars for the
transplant of the organ. Chen Zhonghua, from the Transplantation Institute of
Tongji Hospital in Wuhan, said the rules were "just a tiny step forward in
legislation" and that they did not tackle the problem of the source of the
organs. According to statistics from people working in the sector, 99% of organs come
from executed prisoners and only 1% comes from live donors. Yesterday, Qin Gang,
Foreign Ministry spokesman, denied this high percentage, claiming that organs
were taken from prisoners "in only a few cases". In reality, the sale
of organs after execution is a trade that boosts prison coffers. Years ago,
Human Rights Watch published entire dossiers on trafficking in the organs of
death row convicts. The methods of execution have been changed to allow for use
of the organs. Before, condemned men were killed by a bullet to the back of the
head or the heart. Now, to save all their organs, convicts are killed by lethal
injection, in the presence of doctors and nurses and with special containers set
up in equipped ambulances. The body of the man killed is given to doctors who
see to the extraction and conservation of the organs. Communist Party officials
have admitted that each year, China carries out at least 10,000 executions, thus
fuelling the organ trade. According to human rights groups, execution is put off
until the market needs organs that match the blood group and body type of the
prisoner. It is unclear whether or not prisoners give consent for the use of their
organs. Many families of condemned people, especially followers of the Falun
Gong movement, have accused the government of using the organs of their
relatives without their consent. Medical institutions have carried out research on executed prisoners' organs
since the 1960s. However, it was in the 90s that the trade started to boom.
Prof. Chen Zhonghua pointed to a thick web of connivance that draws together the
police, the courts and hospitals for the sake of money. Another source of organs is people who offer their own for transplants
because of desperate poverty. Individuals and organizations fill the walls of
hospitals, clinics, washrooms and websites with offers of kidneys, giving their
telephone number as a contact. The new regulations may be able to rein in the
illegal trade but they will not stop it. According to Prof. Chen, the situation
remains "disordered and messy". The only positive aspect is that the
new rules will stop transplants in "substandard medical institutes without
qualified personnel". http://www.asianews.it/view.php?l=en&art=5766.jpg)
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