Five
people in southern China have been charged with intentional injury in the case
of a Chinese teenager who sold a kidney so he could buy an iPhone and an iPad,
the government-run Xinhua News Agency said on Friday.
The
five included a surgeon who removed a kidney from a 17-year-old boy in April
last year. The boy, identified only by his surname Wang, now suffers from renal
deficiency, Xinhua quoted prosecutors in Chenzhou city, Hunan province as
saying.
According
to the Xinhua account, one of the defendants received about 220,000 yuan (about
$35,000) to arrange the transplant. He paid Wang 22,000 yuan and split the rest
with the surgeon, the three other defendants and other medical staff.
The
report did not say who received and paid for the kidney.
The
teen was from Anhui, one of China’s poorest provinces, where inhabitants
frequently leave to find work and a better life elsewhere. He bought an iPhone
and iPad, and when asked by his mother where he got the money, admitted selling
a kidney.
Apple
products are hugely popular in China, but are priced beyond the reach of many
Chinese. IPhones start at 3,988 yuan ($633), and iPads begin at 2,988 yuan
($474).
Wang’s
renal deficiency is deteriorating, Xinhua quoted prosecutors as saying.
Only
a fraction of the people who need organ transplants in China are able to get
them, leading to “transplant tourism” where patients travel overseas for such
operations, and to a black market for human organs.
China
banned the trading of human organs in 2007, Xinhua said. Several other suspects
involved in the case are still being investigated.
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