Thursday, July 03, 2008

Men tried to sell their kidneys

from Adelaide now, Australia

TWO Indonesians have been found guilty by a Singapore court of illegally agreeing to sell their kidneys in the city-state.

Sulaiman bin Damanik, who was to sell his kidney to a well-known Singaporean retailer for $S23,700 ($17,460) in June this year, was found guilty of agreeing to sell his kidney and lying to officials, court documents show.

He was fined $S1000 ($A765) and sentenced to two weeks in jail.

Toni, who liaised between Sulaiman and the prospective Singaporean kidney buyer, was fined $S2000 and sentenced to three and a half months in jail.

Toni managed to sell his kidney earlier this year before becoming the middleman for Sulaiman's transaction. Both men had lied to Singapore health officials, saying they were related to the recipients, and denied accepting money.

However Sulaiman's surgery was scuppered after Singapore's health ministry intervened.

According to court documents, both men pleaded for leniency citing poverty as spurring them to sell their kidneys.

Sulaiman was the sole breadwinner of this family earning $S120 ($92) a month, while Toni, who has two children and a third on the way, worked as a garbage collector earning $S140 ($107) monthly.

Singapore bans trading of organs and blood. Those found guilty can be fined up to $S10,000 ($7654) or jailed up to a year.

According to the World Health Organisation, organ traffickers can buy organs for as little as $US1000 ($1040) and sell them to wealthy clients for as much as $US200,000 ($208,000).

Link to full article. May expire in future.

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