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Dev wrote 49 articles and got 79 comments. The last article was submitted on 05/29/08

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Title: KIDNEY RACKET UNDERGROUND BUSINESS


India to probe kidney racket link to Nepal:-

Kantipur Report

NEW DELHI, Feb 5 - Indian police have decided to send a special team to Nepal for further investigation after reports that a multi-million kidney racket based in India was spread well over to Nepal.
Police investigation into Gurgaon kidney racket also brought the fact into the light that the main alleged in the illegal trade Dr Amit Kumar could be hiding in Nepal.

Dr Amit's close friend and partner Dr Upendra Kumar reavealed this during police interrogation while claiming that the former also owns a big hospital in Nepal.

Police had arrested

five persons including Dr Upendra from Dr Amit Kumar's Hospital in Gurgaon's Sector 23 about 10 days ago, for investigation.

Earlier, sleuths probing the kidney racket had revealed that at least three Turkish nationals had died during transplant procedures at the Hospital between 2003 to 2005. The matter

was allegedly covered up claiming the three died due to cardiac failure.

http://www.kantipuronline .com/kolnews.php?&nid=136 490 ...

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Dr Kidney arrested in Nepal

Date Friday, February 8th 2008, 9:49 PM

"Dr Horror" charged of illegal possession of foreign currency, to be produced in court Sunday:-

A day after arresting him in not-so-dramatic circumstances from a hotel in Chitwan, police put Dr Amit Kumar, India's kidney racket mastermind, in public view by organising a press conference at 11:30 am Friday in Kathmandu.

http://www.nepalnews.com/ archive/2008/feb/feb08/ne ws04.php#1




Nepal Police present alleged kidney racket kingpin Dr. Amit Kumar at a press conference in Kathmandu, Friday Feb 08 08 nepalnews.com/rh
Kumar was brought to Kathmandu from Chitwan by a special team of police early morning and was being held at Hanumandhoka police station with two of his accomplices for interrogation.

Police officials told a packed crowd of media-men at the press conference organised at Metropolitan Police Cell in Ranipokhari that Kumar would be produced in court on Sunday since Friday and Saturday happened to be holidays. He will be charged of possessing more-than-permissible amount of foreign currency.

A bankdraft for Indian rupees 936,000, and Euros 145,000 and USD 18,900 in cash were recovered from his possession during his arrest.

A police source said that since Interpol had also issued red corner notice against Dr Kumar recently for his involvement in kidney racket in India, police officials are also discussing possibility of extraditing him to India.

Before being escorted out of the conference room, Kumar said, "I am just a doctor…not a kidney dealer. I will reveal all the truth by organising a press conference after my release."

Dr Amit Kumar, the man dubbed "Doctor Horror" by the Indian media after being accused of having forced or duped around 500 people into donating their kidneys, was arrested from a hotel in Sauraha, Chitwan. Kumar was brought to Kathmandu at midnight amidst tight security. Police said they also recovered some fake documents from him which made it clear that he was trying to acquire a Nepali Citizenship and passport apparently to reunite with his family in Canada.

After the illegal kidney racket operated by Dr Kumar was busted by the India police, he had fled to Nepal. Following reports that he was the kingpin of the international racket in illegal kidney transplants, Dr Kumar had hogged the headlines in India with television channels reporting his linkages in Nepal saying that he was also operating a hospital here.

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Dev

Dr. Amit Kumar got arrest

Date Friday, February 8th 2008, 9:20 PM

India’s kidney racket leader nabbed in Nepal:-

Police in Nepal have arrested one Dr. Amit Kumar, who allegedly leads a kidney racket operating in India.

He was arrested, Thursday, from a hotel in Sauraha, Chitwan – Hotel Wildlife Camp. But his Nepali associate fled the scene after the police came calling.

Meanwhile, The Himalayan Times has quoted Deputy Inspector General of Police Kiran Gautam as confirming that Dr. Kumar has, indeed, been arrested.

The illegal kidney racket operated by Dr. Amit Kumar has been in the forefront of the media reports in India, of late. He was suspected to have fled to Nepal. Indian television channels had been reporting of his linkages with Nepal saying that Kumar was also operating a hospital here. nepalnews.com sd Feb 08 08

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Nepal Kidney trade

Date Monday, February 4th 2008, 10:36 PM

Nepal's trade of doom

By Charles Haviland- BBC correspondent in Kathmandu

A small group of impoverished villages not far from the Nepalese capital, Kathmandu, have recently become an epicentre for the selling of kidneys.
Kidney donation in Nepal is illegal, except from a close relative. But middlemen have persuaded impoverished villagers to sell a kidney for cash or land.

I met one such donor, Ram Thakuri, at his family's two-storey mud hut in the village of Shikharpur, less than two hours drive east of Kathmandu.

Many people here are subsistence farmers and life is very basic, with the cattle living inside the house.

Health 'suffered'

Ram is only 22 but has to support his parents and two brothers from his factory job in the capital.

I needed money, so I decided to do it - Ram Thakuri, kidney donor

Nowadays, he told me, he finds heavy work like that difficult. He believes his health has suffered because he's given up a kidney.

"I'd heard so many people talking about the middlemen who sell the villagers' kidneys," he said.

Two brokers, who Ram says were local tailors, arranged for him to travel to Madras in India, where he was operated on.

Later, secretly, his father followed suit.

"The brokers promised me 160,000 rupees [$2,100]. But I only got 75,000 [$1,000], and the brokers disappeared," said Ram. "The money has done nothing at all to change my life."

Villagers cheated....

Villagers gathered under a tree told me about the problem. Perhaps a fifth of the people here, desperate for cash, have sold a kidney, without proper screening to ensure they're fit enough to do it.

Udab Bajgai had the operation in Punjab three years ago aged just 19. He had no land or money and was desperate for cash.

But, he said, he'd received not a single rupee of the promised money - part of what seems to be a clear pattern of brokers cheating villagers.

Badri Prasad Dhungana, a local schoolteacher, has been trying to publicise the issue since becoming aware of it five years ago.

"The brokers promise them between 80,000 and 180,000 rupees, depending on the blood group," he said.

He has never met the brokers personally, but believes many live in Kathmandu, a convenient distance away.

Unlike kidney rackets in other countries, most of these transplanted kidneys come back to Kathmandu, even if the villagers go all the way to India for their operations.

Although Nepal still lacks the technology to transplant kidneys, there is a growing demand for such transplants among Nepalis who suffer kidney failure - especially when those patients are more prosperous and educated.

Ethical dilemma:-

In the dialysis ward at the National Kidney Centre, patients have to come three times a week for costly treatment. A new kidney offers them a way out of this ordeal.

The centre's director, Dr Rishi Kumar Kafle, says the brokers are cunningly taking advantage of this - a neat case of supply and demand.

But he admits that there is an ethical dilemma here.

"Ethically, the people should not buy any kidneys from anybody," he says.

On the other hand, people often ask him for a way out of the punishing dialysis routine.

"Being a doctor, taking into consideration these people, how can I say - you go and die, or come to my centre for dialysis all the time? This also seems to be illogical."

He believes commercialisation of kidney transplants should stop and that willing donors should get government support such as regular check-ups.

Less than two hours away, in Shikharpur, past kidney donor Udab is bitter about what he went through.

"I'd advise other people, never do this, because I've been through it and I don't want anyone else to go through what I did. I feel extremely angry but also helpless," he says.

This kind of trade in organs will continue in the shadows, here as in many other poor countries. The more the demand, the more people will step in to make money out of it.

But these are villages where there is no chance of education about the need for extra protection of the kidney that remains, and regular health checks are unaffordable.

So each new recipient can mean one more endangered life in the village.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/ pr/fr/-/2/hi/south_asia/3 674328.stm

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India's booming kidney racket

Date Monday, February 4th 2008, 10:31 PM

India's booming kidney racket:-

By Sanjoy Majumder - BBC News, Delhi

"When I woke up, I felt this terrible pain on my abdomen. They told me they had taken out my kidney.
"I thought I was going to die."

Shakeel Ahmed only wanted to come to Delhi to find work.

So when two men approached him outside the railway station offering him a construction job, he readily agreed.

"They drove me to a house far away. On the way they asked me some strange questions like if I had any diseases," he says.

Later that night he was transferred along with two other men to another house.

"There were these men in green coats they took a sample of my blood

"I was given an injection and I passed out."

Massive racket

Shakeel and two other victims are now being kept in a solitary ward in a civic hospital in Gurgaon, an affluent suburb of Delhi, under the watchful eyes of a policeman.




The laws in India make it impossible to get a kidney legally
Kamal Varma

They were brought here by the police, who found them during a raid on an illegal clinic.

It was the first hint that they had stumbled on a massive racket involving millions of dollars and reaching out to all corners of India and even some countries abroad.

"Many men, mostly poor labourers, were brought here and their kidneys removed," says Gurgaon police commissioner Mohinder Lal.

"They were offered between $1-2000. The recipients were wealthy clients in India and other countries. Some of them were from Greece, Arab countries, United States and one or two patients from European countries."

An international investigation is now under way. Interpol has been alerted to look out for two doctors believed to be the kingpins of the operation.

But in India a debate is now beginning on why so few people come forward to donate their organs.


An estimated 150,000 Indians need a kidney transplant every year, but only 3,500 are available.

One of the needy is Kamal Verma.

A year ago he was told that he would need a transplant or undergo dialysis for his failing kidneys.

"The laws in India are so that it makes it impossible to get a kidney legally.

"I can only get one from a blood relative."

It's one of the major reasons for the thriving black market.

"Every hospital has a tout. In fact, the doctors or nephrologists will often suggest a person that you can contact to get a kidney. They charge up to $10,000.

"But I don't have the money and in any case it's illegal so I don't want to go down that route."

So the once active trade exhibitor is now resigned to a life of virtual retirement.

"I can barely see, I can't do a strenuous job, I get short of breath. My life is finished," he says as he suns himself on the terrace of his modest flat.

Small-town India

It's this hopeless mismatch between demand and supply that is being ruthlessly exploited by some doctors and agents.


And fuelling it is a million-dollar black economy that has spread its tentacles across the country.

Especially in small town India.

Meerut is a little over an hour's drive east of Delhi.

It's central market is busy, its narrow, congested lanes choked with people, vehicles of all shapes and sizes and stray animals.

On one side is the decaying red brick town hall.


Sitting on the steps or squatting on their haunches outside are daily wage labourers.

They wait for business, pulling on bidis (country cigarettes) while some play cards. Others nap.

Many of them have already sold their kidneys.

"I needed the money," says Om Prakash simply.

A house painter, he's in his forties but looks a decade older.

His cheeks are hollowed, his eyes glazed and his skin is stretched tight over his bones.

'Who can refuse?

"Three years ago some men said they'd pay me 80.000 rupees ($2,000) for my kidney.

"Who can refuse? People kill for money this isn't that bad."

There are many like him who need the money to buy food and support large families.

Or worse is an addiction. Rich pickings for anyone with a bit of cash.

Back in the Gurgaon hospital, Shakeel Ahmed's aged parents look at their exhausted son.

"He was the only one earning in the family," says his father

"I have another son who's unemployed and a daughter who's divorced with five children.

"What'll we do for money?," he says, wiping his eyes.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/ pr/fr/-/2/hi/south_asia/7 223157.stm

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