Since the decline in Internet related frauds, especially the
infamous ‘Yahoo Yahoo’, unemployed, frustrated and ‘ambitious’ Nigerian
youths, especially those with the get-rich-quick mindset have moved on
to a more deadly but lucrative money spinning venture-sale of kidneys.
With the worsening economic and resultant unemployment situation in the country, the business, though old, has remained a growing fad.
On
Thursday, April 18, 2013, Kingsley Odoh, a Chemical Engineering
graduate of Institute of Management and Technology (IMT), Enugu, flew
into Nigeria, from Malaysia. Immediately after his ‘glorious’ arrival in
Akanu Ibiam International Airport, Enugu, the atmosphere seemed
transformed. Apart from his appearances oozing riches, his bravado also
signaled that ‘levels have changed,’ as he treated longtime friends to
sumptuous meals and expensive wines in one of Enugu costliest hotels,
Protea Hotel.
As if that shindig was not enough, for many weeks,
probably till today, Odoh’s residence located at Independence Layout,
Enugu, has suddenly turned to a haven of merriments, as friends, both
old and new regularly visit to wine and dine with him.
Apart from
relocating from his one room apartment to a four bed room flat, Odoh
also grooves around the Coal City in his newly acquired Sports Utility
Vehicle, and expectedly, in company of his choice girls who are mostly
students of IMT and ESUT.
While few of his pious acquaintances have questioned his instantaneous grass to grace status, describing him as internet scammer, a handful of others knew how he made his money-not from internet fraud, but sale of his own kidney!
“If you are interested I will connect you to the agents. The truth is that there is nothing wrong in what I did. If people can donate their kidneys to save lives, why can’t another person sell his to also save a life and at the same time make money to help alleviate his poor condition. That was what I did and I have no regret for the act,” he revealed to Sunday Express.
Odoh further threw the bombshell: “As I’m speaking with you, there are lots of Nigerians on the queue in Malaysia who have made all the arrangements to sell their kidneys.
Some of them desperately need
money to establish something that would turn their lives around. I
wouldn’t tell you that some are not donating for free. But the truth is
that, even those who have chosen to donate for free are still being
financially compensated. So what is the difference? He rhetorically
asked.
On why he chose to trade one of his kidneys for money, the
Abia State-born graduate avowed thus: “What I did is what anybody could
easily do. I just needed the money so I went for it. Besides, I don’t
see anything wrong in it, especially when it’s obvious that all what one
needs to live a normal life is one kidney. If you are interested, I
will link you up,” he disclosed.
While Odoh, according to
insiders, have already squandered part of the eight million naira (N8m)
he was allegedly paid in exchange for his kidney, he is currently
considering setting up a boutique in the heart of the city. “He has
already paid for a shop along Ogui road. From his comments, I believe it
is going to be a boutique or super market.
He just needs
something that would keep him out of the reach of poverty, which is the
major reason he took the risk,” one of his close friends further
revealed in a telephone chat.“Employment and frustration drove Odoh into
this deadly venture. He’s been looking for a job several years after we
left school,” hinted another of his mates on campus.
No doubt,
the kidney-for-money business has become a booming market for the
Nigerian youths, as one kidney goes for about seven to eight million
naira. This mouth watering price is the attraction for those who travel
to these countries- India, Bangladesh, Iran, China, etc- ultimately to
deal in the illicit and very risky business.
Sunday
Express investigations further uncovered that there is a sophisticated
online network of vendors, agents, resellers and hunters, who actively
seek young Nigerians ready to trade their kidneys, and other vital
organs. One among such is www. kidneykidney.com.
“Crisis? Crisis
is running over the planet, but you’ve got a chance! The cost of a human
kidney is $70, 000-$80,000 and it could be enough to pay all your
debts, credits and much more. You can help yourself right now: just sell
your kidney. Hurry up!” That is one of the adverts on the website.
“Link your friends and get 20% of friend’s kidney price. Only until July
1,” another one reads.
Apart from the online middlemen, there are
so many other agents with offices situated in some cities in Nigeria,
especially in Enugu, Asaba, Benin, and Lagos. They arrange and fly out
candidates to these countries, mostly, India and Malaysia.
However, while some people successfully get themselves operated upon and get paid, others are not so fortunate as they die either before the surgery is completed or shortly after. Some, according to reports, end up suffering renal deficiencies in the long run.
Speaking on the
health implication of the widely condemned act, a Neurologist, Ayodele
kehinde, stated thus: “While it is very much possible for such
individuals to live a normal and active life, such lifestyle is
sometimes demanding in many aspects. 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. Personally, I don’t really support such trade in organs.
These organs are priceless possessions given to you by God, for free.
So, why sell? It is better donated for free.”
Proffering a
solution to this menace, a concerned Nigerian, Jimoh Obi, advises thus:
“The Federal Government should ensure that Nigerian youths travelling
to Malaysia, India and China are rigorously vetted to determine their
mission in these Asian countries. There have been claims that some
travel agencies woo youths into the kidney trade under the guise of
schooling abroad.
Every claim of admission into a Malaysian school
should be properly verified; government should also double-check to see
if the youths register at the schools or whether it is a ploy to jet out
of the country to exchange their kidneys for 10 million Naira. They
should also provide employment to our teeming youths are becoming more
frustrated and desperate due to untold economic hardship.”
Obi
continues: “I would also like to suggest a more drastic measure to check
every Nigerian youth at the point of departure and return from the
mentioned Asian countries to determine if someone with two kidneys is
now ‘miraculously’ left with one kidney.
Government should take a step further. If upon discovering that any youth had sold his kidney, the travel agency that facilitated his travelling should be black-listed and those managing it jailed. The National Assembly should also come up with a legislation that makes it a crime to lure youths into the kidney business.”
According to reports, given the high incidences of
chronic kidney diseases in some Asian countries, the trade is certainly a
money-spinner. In Malaysia alone, it is said that there are about 2,500
cases of kidney failure yearly while in China about 1.5 million people
are reportedly in dire need of organ transplants, thus fueling an
illegal trade in organs.
Meanwhile, as you read this shocking
confession from Kingsley Odoh, there are possibly more than 1000 other
Nigerians currently making preparations to barter their kidneys for
money. Ironically, the tales of those who have treaded the path and
failed does not in any way deter prospective “kidney sellers” from
embarking on the deadly voyage, all because of poverty caused by the
frustration of unemployment among youths.
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