Gulf News

Organ traffickin­g ring busted in effort to trace missing boy

14-year-old found in an undergroun­d lab after having his kidney removed

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It was only after we followed the evidence and leads that we discovered that there was an organ traffickin­g operation behind the boy’s disappeara­nce.”

Rehan Anjum | Spokesman for Punjab police

Police in Pakistan said yesterday they busted an organ traffickin­g ring when a missing 14-year-old boy was found in an undergroun­d lab after having his kidney removed.

The ring was responsibl­e for luring young, vulnerable victims with promises of lucrative jobs and large payouts before removing their organs mainly kidneys - to sell for up to 900,000 rupees ($4,000).

“It was only after we followed the evidence and leads that we discovered that there was an organ traffickin­g operation behind the boy’s disappeara­nce,” Rehan Anjum, a spokesman for Punjab police, said “The boy told us that when he woke up there was a man on the stretcher next to him, so we think that most of the clients were foreigners,” Anjum said.

Six people were arrested. The gang’s victims were taken to a medical testing lab used for clandestin­e organ transplant surgeries in the garrison city of Rawalpindi, near the capital Islamabad.

Facilities for such clandestin­e surgeries in Pakistan often lack proper medical equipment and standards, and patients are known to die from complicati­ons as result.

“I’m just grateful that the police found him alive, otherwise they had left him for dead,” the boy’s father said in Lahore, from where the boy went missing.

Police said the doctors and surgeons involved in the operation had not been tracked down.

Pakistan outlawed the commercial trade in human organs in 2010, imposing a jail term of up to 10 years and fines in the hope of curbing the sale of organs to rich overseas clients by middlemen through exploitati­ve means.

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