Organ sales, a mouse-click away

In China, where a growing demand for organ transplants coupled with a dramatic shortage of donors has fuelled a rampant black market trade, selling your organs for cash is a mouse click away.

An internet search reveals a website offering kidneys for sale and the contact information of those able to procure them. A young woman, posing as a migrant worker from Hebei province, calls a man who has advertised on the website, identified as Mr He.

“I need money,” she says over the phone. “Do you want a woman’s kidney?”

Mr He asks her age. Twenty-five, she replies.

“Of course we want your kidney.”

Mr He tells the woman to travel to Xuzhou city, Jiangsu province, where somebody will be waiting when her train pulls into the station. She’ll be given a physical examination and, if she’s found to be in good health, Mr He will find a suitable transplant candidate. He says he’ll pay RMB 320,000 (50,000 dollars) – a dubious offer, since most kidneys in China sell for around RMB 100,000 (15,000 dollars) – and promises to transfer the money before surgery.

In China, around 1.5 million people require organ transplants, but just 10,000 receive them each year. The vast majority of organs in China still come from condemned prisoners, but new government regulations have reduced the number of organs available for transplant. Meanwhile, few Chinese agree to donate their organs upon death, widening the gap between supply and demand.

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