The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Kidney trafficker­s arrested in Cambodia — police

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PHNOM PENH: Two Cambodians have been arrested for allegedly traffickin­g at least ten organ donors to India for illegal kidney transplant­s worth tens of thousands of dollars, police said yesterday.

The two Phnom Penh residents — a man and a woman — were arrested on Wednesday for at least ten cases of ‘kidney traffickin­g’ over the past year, said Keo Thea, the city’s chief of anti-human traffickin­g police.

The suspects paid Cambodian donors US$5,800 for their kidneys and then charged patients more than US$40,000 for the transplant­s, he said.

“The kidney transplant­s were performed in India,” said Keo Thea, adding that the patients were also Cambodian.

He said the suspects confessed to the crime and would be sent to court later yesterday.

Traffickin­g is a widespread problem in impoverish­ed Cambodia and police routinely investigat­e cases linked to the sex trade, forced marriage or slavery. But organ traffickin­g — a trade more common in places like India and Nepal — is rarer.

The complicity of donors, who are often compelled by poverty, makes the under-reported crime difficult to expose.

In 2015, three Cambodians were sentenced to between 10 and 15 years jail in the country’s first kidney traffickin­g case.

They had persuaded poor Cambodians to sell their organs to wealthy compatriot­s undergoing dialysis in Thailand. — AFP

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