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Nigerians Are Now Selling Their Kidneys To Survive Hardship - Politics - Nairaland

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Nigerians Are Now Selling Their Kidneys To Survive Hardship by aloyemeka1: 12:26am On Sep 19, 2011
[size=14pt]How Nigerians sell own kidneys abroad[/size]
Written by Abdulkareem Baba Aminu, Hussain J. Ibrahim &Solomon Chung Saturday, 17 September 2011

Samson Eghosa, 31, grew up in Benin, Edo State. As soon as he hit his teens, a cousin sold the idea of ‘travelling out’ to him. After series of criminal acts, the duo raised enough money to head for Italy, where Eghosa faced the harsh reality there which included odd jobs, always being on the run from the law and pressure from home to send money which wasn’t regularly coming. After four years of ‘hustling’ on the back alleys of Rome, Eghosa was told by a South African acquaintance of a man who is a middle-man for kidney donor seekers.


A meeting was immediately set up by Eghosa’s South African acquaintance with the middle-man in a restaurant, where in an atmosphere he describes as routine, a direct offer was made to him. “The man just flat-out made an offer to me,” wrote Eghosa to Weekly Trust in an e-mail. “He offered the equivalent of about $10, 000.00 so I agreed.”


The man Eghosa describes as having a professional mien now proceeded to lay out the risk involved in the operation. But there was no real need for him to do so because Eghosa’s desperation and need for the cash involved has made him quite willing to face death if need be. “I didn’t care,” he says. “I had a lot of things to take care of in Nigeria and the money would come in really handy. So I agreed. A date was set and we met again with the middle-man and the South African (who collected some commission from the middle man).”

Eghosa says he was taken to a hospital-like place which could just be an improvised facility that will enable the operation to take out his kidney go on successfully. But reality began to dawn upon him when after the operation, as he says, “I wasn’t really looked after during recovery time. Some weeks later and my stitches were still painful. The worst aspect of it all was when I sent half of the money home, an uncle of mine who was to collect it and take to my mother absconded with the cash. He still hasn’t been heard from. The remaining is still with me.”

That was four months ago. Now, he says, “I fall very sick every now and then, but I hear it might not be connected to my operation. I’m currently doing jobs like crazy so I’ll be able to go back home.”

Eghosa is one of many Nigerians who are giving out their kidneys to those in desperate need, though not for humanitarian reasons but for cash, fuelling business in the sale of human parts. Like the popular 419 which Nigerians have exported abroad and which foreigners have come to use as a brand to unfairly profile Nigerians, the sale of kidneys by desperate Nigerians is becoming another national export and a brand that threatens to further entrench the country’s image as full of money-seeking citizens with no scruples.

Now, mostly in locations in Malaysia and India, Nigerians in droves, according to the estimate made by a source familiar with the trade, line up to be tested in the hope that their kidneys would be deemed good enough to be donated to a sick person. The two Asian countries that have become favoured destinations of Nigerians have also become favoured places of treatment for Europeans and Americans for diseases related to the kidney.

The trade involving Nigerians is old. Dr. Amaechi Nwaokolo a former intelligence officer who has worked on the desk of the Nigerian/Indian bilateral trade and made several visits to India says it has been on since the 90’s and intelligence sources have known that Nigerians sometimes line up to be tested so they can sell their kidneys. “But this does not mean that the government should start wasting money to form an agency like NAPTIP to check the trend in the sale of human organs, because it will not work. The underlining problem, especially among desperate Nigerian youths is poverty and lack of employment. If this problem is not fixed, it can only continue to get worse.”

A common thread in the tale of sources who agreed to provide information for this story is they had reached the end of their tether and they needed money urgently to salvage not only their own lives, but that of their loved ones.

Mike, also from Edo, sold his kidney in Malaysia and returned back to the country recently. Like Eghosa, he says he was paid $10, 000.00 for his kidney. He says he was left with no choice because it was either he sells one of his kidneys or sits down to watch two of his younger sisters who just graduated from a sewing school become prostitutes because they have no money to set themselves up. He now feels a sense of justification for his action even though he now worries that he is still young and at any time in the future his remaining kidney might not be able to serve him if he falls sick.

Mike says there were a lot of people in the queue in Malaysia, most of them Nigerians, who have gone to sell their kidneys. Like him, those who took the risk needed money desperately to start something that will turn their lives around. Back in the country, he now thinks of a suitable business that will keep him out of the reach of poverty forever.

Nevertheless, he stands the risk of losing forever the boundless energy which is nature’s gift to a youth like him. Dr Ayodele K.A Kehinde, a London-trained nephrologist and CEO of HealthPro Hospital in Lagos and Abuja says, “While it is very much possible for such individuals to live a normal and active life, such lifestyle is sometimes demanding in many respect.” He says poor dietary and lifestyle habits can overwork a single kidney, causing diminished kidney function, leading to failure. So to live with a single kidney, one needs resources

http://www.weekly.dailytrust.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=7187:how-nigerians-sell-own-kidneys-abroad&catid=40:cover-stories&Itemid=26
Re: Nigerians Are Now Selling Their Kidneys To Survive Hardship by Aywire(m): 6:45pm On Feb 25, 2012
In North America, it's illegal to sell a kidney. This isn't to say people
haven't tried; someone recently tried to hawk their
kidney on eBay, only to have it pulled by the
site -- but not before the price reached epic
heights. There's good reason for this. At this
moment, at least a
million people worldwide
need a kidney, and quickly, and the pay for a single kidney ranges between $5,000 to $150,000. This has been the major reason why the number of organ for cash exchange reaching its peak in recent times. I know a company of people that can help you perform a successful transaction for the sale of your kidney in india or malaysia for a whooping price as high as $90k. If you are interested and need more info, someone who helped a friend of mine with his, you can contact sayrahdavies@yahoo.co.uk
Re: Nigerians Are Now Selling Their Kidneys To Survive Hardship by ektbear: 1:16am On Feb 26, 2012
wow
Re: Nigerians Are Now Selling Their Kidneys To Survive Hardship by musiwa43: 2:49am On Feb 26, 2012
why will anybody sell their kidney. did you post it because i said i will give yar adua my kidney. go and ask yar adua family, why i said so. i am not selling my kidney.
Re: Nigerians Are Now Selling Their Kidneys To Survive Hardship by dasparrow: 3:03am On Feb 26, 2012
musiwa,,.:

why will anybody sell their kidney. did you post it because i said i will give yar adua my kidney. go and ask yar adua family, why i said so. i am not selling my kidney.

LOL grin
Re: Nigerians Are Now Selling Their Kidneys To Survive Hardship by EzeUche(m): 3:06am On Feb 26, 2012
Nigerians both men and women need to start valuing their bodies.
Re: Nigerians Are Now Selling Their Kidneys To Survive Hardship by olaak1(m): 6:57am On Feb 26, 2012
Na wa o! This poverty of a thing self.
Re: Nigerians Are Now Selling Their Kidneys To Survive Hardship by Nobody: 7:41am On Feb 26, 2012
musiwa,,.:

why will anybody sell their kidney. did you post it because i said i will give yar adua my kidney. go and ask yar adua family, why i said so. i am not selling my kidney.
Roflmao. . . . .you dey craze o.
EzeUche:

Nigerians both men and women need to start valuing their bodies.

The quest for money by ibo and bini people is alarming.why would someone sell their body part for a fee that is not worth their life ? From spare part seller to body part seller,what a co-incidence !
Re: Nigerians Are Now Selling Their Kidneys To Survive Hardship by vowiski(m): 7:51am On Feb 26, 2012
musiwa,,.:

why will anybody sell their kidney. did you post it because i said i will give yar adua my kidney. go and ask yar adua family, why i said so. i am not selling my kidney.
hehehe cheesy grin
Re: Nigerians Are Now Selling Their Kidneys To Survive Hardship by mkmyers45(m): 9:31am On Feb 26, 2012
Offer many Nigerian $200k for thier kidney and they will swap before you say "Jack Robinson"

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