The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

Ukrainians in financial difficulti­es targeted in organ traffickin­g

- By Sho Komine Yomiuri Shimbun Staff Writer

Ukrainians having nancial di culties have been identi ed as organ donors in several cases of suspected tra cking of living kidney transplant­s carried out overseas through the mediation of a Tokyo-based nonpro t organizati­on. Even when there is an agreement between donors and recipients or a third party, such transplant­s are criticized internatio­nally as inhumane.

EMPHASIZIN­G ‘QUALITY’

“e COVID-19 crisis has made our daily lives worse. Anyone who wants to sell a kidney should contact us.”

On a website written in Ukrainian, such posts about organ tra cking have increased since the COVID-19 disaster broke out in 2020. In 2021, there were about 280 such posts, nearly four times as many as in 2019.

The site lists people’s age and blood type, and the organ someone wishes to buy or sell and at what price. There are even posts that emphasize the “quality” of the organs on offer, such as, “Perfectly healthy 20-year-old!” Contact informatio­n such as phone numbers and email addresses are also listed.

Many organ buyers claim to be medical profession­als outside of Ukraine. For example, a person who calls himself “George” and says he is a nephrologi­st, has o ered to broker sales on the same site on about 40 occasions since June last year.

e posts continued unabated even a er Russia’s invasion of Ukraine began. On Sept. 7, a person claiming to be a neurologis­t posted, “If you are su ering from economic hardship, I will buy your kidney.” He stated that he had “bases in Japan” as well as in the United States and India. e Yomiuri Shimbun put questions to this person by email but received no reply.

‘YOU CAN BUY A HOUSE’

A man who traveled to Bulgaria in April last year to receive a kidney transplant under the guidance of the NPO — the Intractabl­e Disease Patient Support Associatio­n — said in an interview that his donor was a Ukrainian woman. e donor for a Japanese woman, 58, who received a kidney transplant in the Central Asian country of Kyrgyzstan in December last year was also a Ukrainian woman, who received nearly $15,000 (about ¥2 million) in return for donating her kidney.

e coordinato­r who arranged these two transplant­s, a 58-year-old Turkish man, was arrested by Ukrainian authoritie­s in 2017 on suspicion of his involvemen­t in organ tra cking. According to court documents, the donors in these cases were also Ukrainians. ey were solicited on social media with the promise of receiving about $15,000 for a kidney, and taken to Turkey and other countries to have the kidneys removed.

Behind such developmen­ts is the low income level in Ukraine. According to the Finance Ministry of Ukraine, the average annual income of Ukrainians in 2021 was about ¥650,000, less than onesixth that of Japanese people.

A source familiar with the local situation said: “In many cases, people living in poor rural areas become donors. It is even said that ‘if you sell a kidney, you can buy a house.’”

TRANSPLANT­S WITHIN OWN COUNTRY

e Declaratio­n of Istanbul, adopted by the Transplant­ation Society in 2008, advocates that “transplant tourism,” in which a person receives an organ in exchange for money outside his or her own country, such as in developing countries, “violates the principles of equity, justice and respect for human dignity” and should be prohibited.

Such practices are not only inhumane. Transplant­ation across judicial borders deprives organ transplant recipients of the opportunit­y to receive a transplant in their own country.

Oksana Ovchynnyko­va, a 29-yearold lawyer living in Odesa, southern Ukraine, was diagnosed with kidney failure at the end of 2020 and was placed on the health ministry’s transplant waiting list. She has been on dialysis for nearly two years while waiting for a transplant, but her turn has not yet come.

“e shortage of organs is a global issue, and Japan should solve the problem on its own so as not to reduce transplant opportunit­ies for patients in other countries,” she said. (Oct. 3)

 ?? The Yomiuri Shimbun ?? A court is seen in Kyiv on Sept. 22, where the Turkish coordinato­r prosecuted by Ukrainian authoritie­s did not attend the organ traffickin­g trial held there.
The Yomiuri Shimbun A court is seen in Kyiv on Sept. 22, where the Turkish coordinato­r prosecuted by Ukrainian authoritie­s did not attend the organ traffickin­g trial held there.

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