The Borneo Post

Top Indian hospital says duped in kidney sale racket

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NEW DELHI: One of India’s top hospitals unwittingl­y removed the kidneys of organ-traffickin­g victims believing they were donating them to relatives, a hospital spokesman said Yesterday, after police arrested five over the racket.

A criminal gang including two workers at the upscale Apollo Hospital in New Delhi allegedly lured poor people to sell their kidneys for 300,000 rupees ( 4,500) before selling the organs on for huge profits, police said.

The gang used forged documents to pretend the victims were relatives of needy transplant recipients, fooling staff at the hospital, where two of the suspects worked as assistants to a senior nephrologi­st.

“The hospital has been a victim of a well-orchestrat­ed operation to cheat patients and the hospital,” an Apollo spokesman said in a statement, adding that the assistants were not on the employee payroll.

“We urge the police to take the strictest of action against all those involved.”

Commercial trade in organs is illegal in India and transplant donations to non-relatives must be approved by a special committee.

The victims came from across India, including Tamil Nadu state in the south and West Bengal in the east, to have their kidneys removed.

“We detected five cases of organ sale (by this criminal ring) this year. We have arrested five men and seized fake ID proofs, CDs, files and documents,” a Delhi police officer said on condition of anonymity. — AFP

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