Off the wire
24 Chinese cities on pollution red alert  • President Xi urges new media outlet to "tell China stories well"  • Disney wins copyright infringement case against Chinese companies  • Top news items in major S. African media outlets  • 1st LD-Writethru: President Xi calls for more effort on free trade zones  • More than 1 million Filipino drug users surrender to police: official  • Yearender: Rise in far-right forces requires EU response to populism  • Deposits in Cypriot banks rise by 6.8 pct in November  • 4 mln foreign tourists visit Cuba in 2016  • China to release environmental forecasts on three Nansha reefs from Jan. 1  
You are here:   Home

16 imprisoned in kidney trading case in east China

Xinhua, December 31, 2016 Adjust font size:

Sixteen people, mostly medical workers, got jail terms on Friday ranging from two to five years for involvement in the illegal trading of human kidneys, said a local court in east China's Shandong Province.

According to Lixia district court of Jinan city, since November 2014, a number of the defendants had searched online for kidney sellers across the country, arranging for tests and matches between sellers and buyers.

Among the defendants there are two surgeons, one anesthetist, one nurse and one assistant doctor, all from Jining city in Shandong. They secretly carried out kidney transplant surgeries in the city of Feicheng.

The trial lasted for over a year and a half.

Patients were asked to pay 400,000 (about 57,612 U.S. dollars) to 600,000 yuan each, while people selling kidneys only received around 40,000 yuan. The defendants made 700 to 15,000 yuan profit per surgery.

According to Friday's verdict, the 16 defendants were convicted of organizing the selling of human organs. They were also told to pay fines ranging from 40,000 to 10,000 yuan.

In 2007, the Chinese government issued its first regulation on human organ transplants, banning organizations and individuals from any trading in human organs. Endi