The chief executive, medical director and three other doctors at a prestigious Indian
hospital have been charged with offences related to illegal organ
transplants after a kidney trafficking racket was uncovered, a police
spokesman said.
Operating out of the private L.H. Hiranandani Hospital in Mumbai,
the organ harvesting ring was busted by police in July following a
tip-off that poor villagers were being paid to sell their kidneys to
recipients via a network of agents.
Mumbai Deputy
Police Commissioner Ashok Dudhe said the five doctors were arrested late
on Tuesday after police had examined the findings of a government
inquiry into the case.
"Two days ago, we got
the report from the director for health services for Mumbai. In this
report, there were charges made against these doctors such as negligence
under the 1994 Transplantation of Human Organs Act," Dudhe told a news conference on Wednesday.
"They
did not follow the procedures laid out, so after receiving the report,
we arrested them and brought them before the court."
Fourteen people have been arrested so far, he said, including a donor, a recipient and middlemen.
Officials at L.H. Hiranandani Hospital did not respond to email requests for comment.
This
is the second kidney trafficking racket found operating out of a top
Indian hospital in recent months. In June, police discovered a similar
racket operating out of the reputable Indraprastha Apollo Hospital in
the capital New Delhi.
A shortage of organs for transplants fuels a black-market trade in body parts in India.
Commercial
trade in organs is illegal in India and only relatives can act as
donors. Transplant donations must
be approved by a special transplant
committee at each hospital.
Police uncovered the
racket at L.H. Hiranandani Hospital after a worker informed them of
suspicious documentation for a scheduled operation for which a woman was
donating a kidney to her husband.
They raided the
hospital during the operation on July 14, and found the couple were not
married and the donor was in fact an impoverished rural woman from the
neighbouring Gujarat state.
Traffickers allegedly
lured poor people from Gujarat into selling their kidneys for about
200,000 rupees ($3,000) and then re-sold their organs on the black
market at a huge profit.
Dudhe said the five
doctors are charged under a section of the law that holds hospital
management responsible for offences committed under their watch. They
are also charged for failure to meet the recipient and donor to explain
the risks of surgery.
"The CEO's job was to meet both the donor and recipient and make the necessary inquiries about them, but he did not do that," said Dudhe.
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