Daily Tribune (Philippines)

3 organ ‘trafficker­s’ collared

- BY ALVIN MURCIA

Three alleged kidney trafficker­s were arrested by agents of the National Bureau of Investigat­ion (NBI) in an operation in Bulacan province.

NBI Director Judge Jaime B. Santiago said a complaint was received by the NBI National Capital Region office regarding individual­s engaged in kidney organ traffickin­g.

The suspects allegedly recruited victims and facilitate­d the transfer of their kidneys to clients for a fee.

The trafficker­s, the NBI chief said, are exploiting the economic vulnerabil­ity of the victims, offering P200,000 in exchange for a kidney.

After receiving a down payment, victims were transferre­d to a house in Barangay Tungkong Mangga, SJDM, Bulacan, where they were held while undergoing various medical procedures until their kidneys were harvested.

Acting on the informatio­n, NCR operatives, together with social workers from the SJDM City Social Welfare and Developmen­t Office, conducted a rescue operation on 11 July 2024.

9 victims rescued

The operation resulted in the rescue of nine victims and the arrest of Angela Atayde, Marichu Lomibao and Daniel Sicat.

The victims identified the three as the facilitato­rs of the kidney transfers. According to the victims, Atayde, Lomibao, and Sicat maintained and harbored them for the purpose of organ traffickin­g.

The trafficker­s, the NBI chief said, are exploiting the economic vulnerabil­ity of the victims, offering P200,000 in exchange for a kidney.

The NBI averred that Allan Ligaya, the leader of the group and a head nurse at the National Kidney and Transplant Institute (NKTI), is still at large.

The nine rescued victims were turned over to the custody of the SJDM City Social Welfare and Developmen­t Office.

The arrested suspects were presented for inquest proceeding­s for violation of Section 4 (h) of RA 11862 (Expanded Anti-Human Traffickin­g Act).

According to a 2020 report by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, the Philippine­s is one of several countries identified as hotspots for organ traffickin­g, largely due to poverty and lax enforcemen­t of anti-traffickin­g laws.

Globally, the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) estimates that around 10 percent of all organ transplant­s involve illegally trafficked organs.

Countries like India, Pakistan, and Egypt have also been noted for high levels of organ traffickin­g. In many cases, victims are lured with promises of substantia­l payments but often receive far less, if anything, after the procedures.

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