advertisement
On TechRepublic: 19 words you don't want in your resume
Find Articles in:
all
Business
Reference
Technology
News
Sports
Health
Autos
Arts
Home & Garden

Cautious welcome for Philippines transplant ban

AFP,  April, 2008  

premiumContent provided
in partnership with
premium

MANILA (AFP) — Church leaders and human rights campaigners Wednesday welcomed a ban by the Philippines on organ transplants to foreigners but cautioned that loopholes may still allow kidney trafficking to persist.

The health department Tuesday banned most organ transplants to foreigners and vowed tough punishments for lawbreakers to stem a thriving trade in poor Filipinos selling their own kidneys.

The highly influential Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines and the Philippine Society of Nephrology both called the order a good step in the fight against organ trafficking.

"That is a step in the right direction," said Albert Chua, an official of the grouping of the country's renal disease experts.

Most Popular Articles in News
The Ten Best Laptop bags
Tata plans cheapest-ever car for Indian market
GLOBALIZATION AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF UNDERDEVELOPMENT OF THE THIRD WORLD
Corn is good for you; Corn is not only a tasty treat, but also a cereal that ...
THE 50 BEST STYLISH HANDBAGS TO CARRY
More »
advertisement

But he warned that the government must also address other related issues, including the requirements of thousands of Filipinos who urgently need kidney replacements to survive irreversible renal failure.

The Philippines is a world "hotspot" for human organ trafficking, ...