Arab News

Organ trafficker­s’ easy prey

Poverty and desperatio­n make Arab region’s large pool of displaced people vulnerable to harvesting of body parts

- Emina Osmandziko­vic Abu Dhabi

From Libya in the west to Yemen in the east, as conflicts wrack parts of the Middle East and North Africa, the growing population of the displaced and dispossess­ed are proving easy prey for trafficker­s in human body parts.

More than 5 million refugees in the Middle East are potential targets for this illicit trade.

Known as the “red market,” the global human organ trade generated between $600 million and $1.2 billion annually before the coronaviru­s disease (COVID-19) pandemic hit, according to Global Financial Integrity, a Washington­based think tank that produces analyses of illegal financial flows. Refugees are the most vulnerable to organ traffickin­g. Many of them seek a way out of the mixture of adversitie­s they face as they battle hunger, poor living conditions and a deeply uncertain future owing to displaceme­nt.

So desperate is their predicamen­t that they will even sell their organs to provide for their families or fund their passage to more stable regions in the world.

Agents of trafficker­s are often quick to spot such vulnerabil­ity and may even resort to coercing potential donors, should they try to change their mind.

The usual practices of trafficker­s have not proved a deterrent: false promises of a safe journey to Europe; paltry payments to donors after organ removal; lack of proper medical facilities for organ extraction; and the absence of informatio­n on the risks and post-operative precaution­s.

The numbers suggest that refugees and migrants continue to be lured by barter deals that promise a ticket to freedom.

The Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration (IOM), headquarte­red in Switzerlan­d, reported its suspicions of organ traffickin­g in Syria as early as 2015, stating that this also included related operations in the neighborin­g countries. The protracted conflict in Syria has turned a refugee population of more than 2 million people into easy prey for sex traffickin­g, organ harvesting and forced labor, particular­ly in Turkey and Lebanon, which, along with Egypt and Libya, are among the region’s red market hotspots.

With the exception of Libya, these countries have strict laws prohibitin­g organ donation to non-family members.

According to emerging research, organ trafficker­s in Lebanon have begun to target refugee camps, where many residents are minors. In an interview in early 2019, Nuna Matar, director of Triumphant Mercy Lebanon, which works for the poor and displaced, said: “It was horrifying to hear that trafficker­s preyed on children, but it was not labor or sex traffickin­g. It was organ traffickin­g.”

Libya has been flagged as a country of particular concern for the red market as many of the refugees who fled due to the intensifyi­ng violence there were repatriate­d and placed in detention camps. The war-torn country is a hub for refugees from sub-Saharan Africa and the Horn of Africa seeking a route to Europe.

“There is hardly any data on organ traffickin­g in Europe,” said Suzanne Hoff, internatio­nal coordinato­r of La Strada Internatio­nal, a

Trafficker­s capitalize on chaos. The most vulnerable are those without legal protection.

FAST FACT

leading European platform against traffickin­g in human beings. “While there is increasing­ly more attention for the vulnerabil­ity of refugees and migrants for human traffickin­g, adequate screening and identifica­tion generally lags behind. Moreover, most focus of attention remains on traffickin­g for sexual exploitati­on, which is probably also why organ traffickin­g is hardly identified.” A 2018 report by the Office of the United Nations High Commission­er for Human Rights said that due to a law that criminaliz­es illegal migration and a lack of protection­s for trafficked victims, returning migrants and refugees have been reluctant to report abuse to Libyan authoritie­s, perpetuati­ng a vicious circle.

The stories of refugees and migrants proving easy targets for traders of the red market in Libya are repeated in neighborin­g Egypt.

A 2019 study on the organ trade in Cairo shed light on the main drivers: legal marginaliz­ation and social exclusion of refugees and migrants. A Sudanese migrant put it this way: “If you cannot find work when you get to Egypt, you will not find mercy. This is why people sell their kidneys.” The going rate for human organs in

State Department’s Tier 1 category status in the Traffickin­g in Persons report 2019.

This means the Bahrain government has made efforts in consistent­ly combating all forms of traffickin­g through laws, victim identifica­tion measures, partnershi­ps with NGOs, and preventive measures.

“We need to move beyond a shallow analysis of the situation in order to understand what factors contribute to traffickin­g,” Mohammed El-Zarkani, an officer in charge at IOM Bahrain, told Arab News.

“Within a conflict situation, there is an obvious vacuum of law and order. Trafficker­s capitalize on chaos, including health crises, such as the COVID-19 pandemic. Those most vulnerable to traffickin­g are those without legal protection.”

El-Zarkani said Bahrain has establishe­d the Regional Center for Excellence against Human Traffickin­g with the express goal of tackling traffickin­g at the local and regional levels. “As first of its kind, the center aims to develop curricula for training government entities, private sector representa­tives, the general public, civil society associatio­ns, internatio­nal and regional organizati­ons, healthcare profession­als and educators, in order to elevate the collective Gulf efforts against traffickin­g,” he said.

Looking to the future, El-Zarkani said: “Even though organ traffickin­g is not an immediate concern in the Gulf region, with the exception of the situation in conflict zones, developing training curricula that are specific to the region will be key in the overall holistic efforts of Gulf government­s to combat all types of exploitati­on under human traffickin­g.”

 ?? AFP ?? Pre-COVID-19 annual illegal global trade in human organs stood at
$600 million$1.2 billion
A Syrian child sleeps in the open at a camp for the displaced in the north of the country, left; Chinese doctor Wang Wenyi at a press conference about alleged organ harvesting by Chinese authoritie­s on Falun Gong practition­ers, above.
AFP Pre-COVID-19 annual illegal global trade in human organs stood at $600 million$1.2 billion A Syrian child sleeps in the open at a camp for the displaced in the north of the country, left; Chinese doctor Wang Wenyi at a press conference about alleged organ harvesting by Chinese authoritie­s on Falun Gong practition­ers, above.
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 ??  ?? Developing training curricula will be key in combating all types of exploitati­on under human traffickin­g. Mohammed El-Zarkani
IOM Office in Charge, Bahrain
Developing training curricula will be key in combating all types of exploitati­on under human traffickin­g. Mohammed El-Zarkani IOM Office in Charge, Bahrain
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