Head: Illegal organ trade thrives on poverty
CAIRO: On the back of dire poverty, legal shortcomings and
religious conservatism, a new mafia is prospering in Egypt and
turning the country into the regional hub for the human organs
trade, experts say.
There are no official statistics, but in a country where social
inequality is high and a quarter of the population is believed
to live under the poverty line, more and more destitute
Egyptians are falling prey to the phenomenon.
The large scars slicing the sides of many Egyptians in
impoverished Cairo neighborhoods most probably testify to an
illegal kidney sale to a rich fellow countryman or a Gulf Arab
who could not find a donor.
"A Saudi patient can pay up to $80,000 split between the doctor,
the donor and the go-between," says Hamdi Al-Sayyed, the head of
Egypt's doctors' union.
"For example, a Jordanian or a Saudi who needs a transplant
comes to Egypt accompanied by a relative as an official cover
and then looks for an Egyptian or a Sudanese who is ready to
sell his organ," he explains.
While most donors are poor and hoping for a better life, not all
are volunteers, with grisly accounts of forced organ 'donations'
earning Egypt the sinister reputation of 'Brazil of the Middle
East'.
Like millions of Egyptians, Abdelhamid AbdelHamid, Ahmed Ibrahim
and Ashraf Zakaria were seeking better paid jobs in the Gulf,
but their quest cost them a kidney.
In a recent interview to the independent Al-Masry Al-Youm daily,
they explained how they had been promised jobs but were
requested to undergo a medical examination beforehand.
The doctor "discovered" they were all suffering from a kidney
infection requiring immediate surgery. They woke up later in
hospital with a missing kidney. The go-between had vanished but
they feared to speak out.
A few days later, the health ministry caught a trafficker
red-handed as he was selling a kidney to a Saudi citizen for
$3,500. The Cairo hospital was supposed to be paid the same
amount.
According to the main anti-narcotics body, a kilogram of bongo,
the popular local form of marijuana, fetches around $100 on the
drugs market. But dealers expose themselves to major risks to
run their trade while organ trafficking can offer a safer and
often more lucrative alternative.
"This mafia should be busted and the only way to do it is to
pass legislation" regulating organ donation, Sayyed says.
Only cornea transplants are covered by legislation, with all
other operations falling in a gaping legal loophole. "Some
doctors see it as an opportunity to make easy money," he
explains.
Sayyed, who is also a lawmaker, has been pushing for parliament
to adopt new legislation slapping heavy fines and prison
sentences on people found guilty of involvement in illegal
organs trafficking.
His proposal also bans transplants between two people of
different nationalities, in a bid to reduce the incentive for
transplant tourism.
In the United States, selling organs is a criminal offense that
can incur a fine of up $50,000 and five years in jail, while
laws are also very tough in Europe.
Yet in Egypt, the go-betweens cannot be prosecuted and the worst
punishment facing corrupt doctors is to be stripped of their
license by their peers.
Some of the unscrupulous doctors even sought the help of the
judiciary to overturn bans by the doctors unions and won their
cases.
"The situation is not tolerable. Not only does it feed a booming
black market, it also leaves us with victims who are dumped
after the transplant," says Haytham Al-Khayyat, a regional
official with the World Health Organization.
Sayyed and Khayyat accuse a group of influential Egyptian
figures, including doctors, of blocking the bill by hiding
behind ethical and religious principles.
While Egypt's current mufti, or senior Islamic jurist, supports
a bill, his predecessor Sheikh Nasr Farid Wasel vocally opposed
it.
"We have the support of the official religious authorities,
including Al-Azhar's Mohammed Sayyed Tantawi," who heads the
highest seat of learning in Sunni Islam, Sayyed says, pointing
out that the cleric himself volunteered as a donor in his will.
The Muslim Brothers, an Islamist movement which controls a fifth
of parliament and is Egypt's main opposition force, also support
introducing a bill. "Legislation is the only way to stem organs
trafficking," spokesman Essam Al-Aryan says. AFP