
 |
BRAZIL:
Poor Sell Organs to
Trans-Atlantic Trafficking Ring
Mario Osava
RIO DE JANEIRO, (IPS) - At least 30 Brazilians have sold their kidneys to
an international human organ trafficking ring for transplants performed in South
Africa, with Israel providing most of the funding, says a legislative commission
in Brazil.
The Pernambuco state legislature's investigative commission began its enquiry in
December and has since helped federal police and justice authorities untangle
concrete cases of human organ sales.
Two Israeli citizens, Gedalya Tauber and Eliezer Ramon, and six Brazilians were
arrested in Recife, capital of Pernambuco state, in the northeast. They are
believed to be active members of the group that recruited people in the area to
sell their kidneys, the commission's chairman, Raimundo Pimentel, told IPS.
The ”sellers” were taken to the South African city of Durban, where the
transplant surgeries took place at St. Augustine Hospital. The recipients were
mostly Israelis, who receive health insurance reimbursements of 70,000 to 80,000
dollars for life-saving medical procedures performed abroad.
The Brazilians were recruited in Recife's impoverished neighbourhoods. The first
ones were paid 10,000 per kidney, but as ”supply” increased, the payments fell
as low as 3,000 dollars, according to Pimentel, who is himself a surgeon in
addition to a deputy in the Pernambuco legislature.
The information obtained by the commission indicates that the trafficking
network also sought kidney sellers in Russia and Romania, for renal patients
from the United States and Iran, in addition to the Israelis.
In Brazil, buying and selling human organs is a crime punishable by up to eight
years in prison, according to a 1997 law. In case of the death of the ”donor”,
the sentence can reach 20 years. A person who sells his or her own organs also
faces three to eight years behind bars.
To be legal, donors must provide organs voluntarily through formal channels,
with recipients prioritised according to urgency and compatibility. The aim is
to prevent the creation of a market in which only the rich can afford
life-saving organ transplants..
Tauber, a retired Israeli police officer, confessed to the legislative
commission that he had begun the search for kidney ”donors” in Recife around two
years ago, in response to the request of a fellow Israeli who promotes surgical
transplants in other countries.
Ivan Bonifacio da Silva, a retired captain of the Pernambuco military police, is
one of the Brazilian arrestees. He was Tauber's first partner in the organ
trafficking network. The two met during a course for police in the United
States, and they set up a company in the Netherlands, ostensibly for selling
weapons and training personnel for private security companies.
Tauber said he did not think he was committing a crime, given that the
transaction is considered legal by his country's government. And he believed it
was a win-win situation: saving the lives of the chronically ill while providing
income for people who ”are very poor, who die of hunger.”
The Israeli embassy in Brazil issued a statement Tuesday denying any
participation by the Israeli government in the illegal trade of human organs.
But it did recognise that its citizens, in emergency cases, can undergo organ
transplants in other countries, ”in a legal manner, complying with international
norms,” and with the financial support of their medical insurance.
The Israeli stance is at the very least ”anti-ethical”, commented Pimentel,
adding that trafficking can only take place on a major scale if there is a major
source of financing, such as the Israeli health system.
Nancy Scheper-Hughes, who heads the Organs Watch project at the U.S. University
of California, Berkeley, testified to the Pernambuco legislative commission that
international trafficking of human organs began some 12 years ago, promoted by
Zacki Shapira, former director of a hospital in Tel Aviv.
Shapira performed more than 300 kidney transplants, sometimes accompanying his
patients to other countries, such as Turkey. The recipients are very wealthy or
have very good health insurance, and the ”donors” are very poor people from
Eastern Europe, Philippines and other developing countries, said Scheper-Hughes,
who specialises in medical anthropology.
In his conversation with IPS, Pimentel said that the U.S. expert had noted that
it seemed to be widely held that these transactions ”save lives and help the
poor.”
The United Nations Convention against Transnational Organised Crime, which
covers prevention, enforcement and sanctions in trafficking of humans, includes
in its definition of human exploitation the extraction of organs.
The World Health Organisation has also condemned the practice of selling human
body parts, prohibiting the advertisement of organs in exchange for money, and
established the principle of equality in terms of human organ donations.
Human organ sales are illegal in most of the world. But, writes Scheper-Hughes
in an article titled ”The New Cannibalism”, the sanctions in one country could
stimulate trafficking in a neighbouring country. The wealthy patients are
willing and able to travel great distances to obtain a transplant.
In November 2000, the World Medical Association declared that payment for organs
or tissue for donation and transplant should be banned. Economic incentive
compromises the voluntary nature of the decision and the altruistic basis of the
donation.
In addition to dismantling the organ trafficking ring in Pernambuco, the
legislative investigative commission, police and justice authorities revealed
the conditions that are necessary for massive trafficking. The resources
provided by the Israeli health system ”were a determining factor” that allowed
the network to function, says Pimentel.
Nevertheless, in his opinion, the rumours that have caused alarm in many
communities in recent years -- such as children being kidnapped and then
returned days later minus a kidney or other organ -- are unfounded. He says
organ trafficking is not as widespread as the public seems to believe.
Organ trafficking requires enormous financial and technical resources, because
of problems related to compatibility between donor and recipient, and because
transplants cannot be performed in just any hospital, he said.
According to the information collected by the Pernambuco legislative commission,
some of the transplants performed in Durban cost 200,000 dollars. A patient
spending so much money would not agree to the procedure unless it were under
excellent hospital conditions and had a high probability of success, concluded
the surgeon-lawmaker.
|