430 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
430 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
|
||
|
||
Conspiracy Nation -- Vol. 1 Num. 72
|
||
======================================
|
||
("Quid coniuratio est?")
|
||
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
HARVESTING ORGANS
|
||
|
||
The following article is from Issue #4 of *PARANOIA: The
|
||
Conspiracy Reader* (further info below).
|
||
|
||
+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
|
||
|
||
Abductions of Children and the Traffic in Organs
|
||
By Maite Pinero, translated by George Andrews
|
||
|
||
A rumor has spread through Latin America that causes fear in the
|
||
slums and rural areas: that children have been abducted or bought
|
||
from poor families to be used as donors of organs. Last March in
|
||
San Luis Potosi, Mexico, the secretary general of the provincial
|
||
government, Librado Ricavar Ribera, announced the opening of an
|
||
investigation on the traffic in organs. He disclosed that
|
||
children in the Altiplano area and the suburbs of San Luis have
|
||
been disappearing, and are then returned to their families
|
||
several weeks later with one kidney missing. Mr. Ricavar Ribera
|
||
stated that the children had been taken to clinics near the U.S.
|
||
frontier. He added that the same traffic was going on in the
|
||
neighboring province of Taumilipas, which is on the U.S. border.
|
||
Several thousand dollars buy the silence of poor families. It is
|
||
the neighbors who make the accusations. {1}.
|
||
|
||
One week later, after a brief search, the director of the
|
||
department of health, Dr. Salazar Martinez, closed the
|
||
investigation. The reason he gave for doing so was that such a
|
||
network "would require an extremely sophisticated hospital
|
||
organization."
|
||
|
||
Although the secretary of the provincial government had stated
|
||
that the operations were not being carried out locally, but at
|
||
the frontier, the department of health refuted his allegations on
|
||
the grounds that there is no hospital in San Luis Potosi that
|
||
does organ transplants. {2}.
|
||
|
||
When we met him, Dr. Salazar Martinez limited the interview to
|
||
two minutes. According to him, the provincial official who
|
||
sounded the alarm "demonstrated light-headed conduct," but
|
||
nevertheless an investigation had been carried out. The doctor
|
||
did not have time to give us any of the details. When asked
|
||
whether he knew that a similar investigation had been ordered two
|
||
years earlier, he no longer found time to continue the
|
||
discussion.
|
||
|
||
As for Librado Ricavar Ribera, he has become the invisible man.
|
||
It is impossible to meet him, or to reach him by phone. This is
|
||
not at all surprising. All of those who have denounced the
|
||
traffic in organs -- ministers, high officials, judges -- have
|
||
been removed from office or otherwise silenced.
|
||
|
||
This scenario began at San Pedro Sula in Honduras. It was there
|
||
that the police discovered several clandestine "nurseries" at the
|
||
end of 1986; "casas de engorde" [CN -- houses where they fatten
|
||
you up] as they were called locally, or houses in which children
|
||
are made fat. The children were then illegally exported out of
|
||
the country "for adoption."
|
||
|
||
In January 1987, after an investigation of several weeks, there
|
||
was a dramatic disclosure. The secretary of the national
|
||
department of social services, Leonardo Villeda Bermudez,
|
||
revealed that the children had been used as donors of organs. He
|
||
added that charitable institutions that care for the physically
|
||
or mentally handicapped had been deceived by criminals, who
|
||
presented themselves as generous benefactors. In interviews with
|
||
the newspaper *la Tribuna* and with Radio America, Leonardo
|
||
Villeda Bermudez described the investigation in detail. His
|
||
conclusion was: "We have proof that the children, who had been
|
||
bought or stolen from poor families, were sold for a minimum of
|
||
ten thousand dollars each to organizations in the United States,
|
||
to be used as donors of organs." {3}. On January 9th, the
|
||
President of Honduras denied these allegations, and fired
|
||
Leonardo Villeda Bermudez from his job. One month later, a
|
||
similar scandal broke out in Guatemala, as the police arrested
|
||
members of an organization that was exporting children to the
|
||
U.S. and Israel. Among those arrested was Mrs. Ofelia Rosal de
|
||
Gama, sister-in-law of the former general and dictator Mejia
|
||
Victores. The chief public relations officer of the police,
|
||
Baudilio Hichos Lopez, stated: "We know that children sent to the
|
||
United States, supposedly to be adopted, were in fact used as
|
||
organ donors."
|
||
|
||
In this same country, in January 1988, the scandal erupted again.
|
||
The police arrested two "dealers in children" of Israeli
|
||
nationality, Michal and Luis Rotman. The director of the drug
|
||
enforcement agency, Miguel Aguirre, announced that "the prisoners
|
||
have confessed that they exported children to Israel and the
|
||
United States. The children were sold for seventy-five thousand
|
||
dollars each to families in need of organ donors for their own
|
||
children."
|
||
|
||
A violent controversy broke out. The embassy of Israel protested
|
||
against "the monstrous accusation" based on "irresponsible
|
||
declarations by an official" specifying that "It is unthinkable
|
||
that such crimes could be committed in Israel" where the removal
|
||
of organs is forbidden by law, and where the only authorized
|
||
transplants "occur under strict conditions of control." When the
|
||
embassy of the United States demanded that the newspaper *El
|
||
Grafico* publish a retraction, the newspaper replied that it had
|
||
merely repeated the statement made by the director of the drug
|
||
enforcement agency. The minister of health put an end to the
|
||
affair by announcing that the information published in *El
|
||
Grafico* was false.
|
||
|
||
Simultaneously the U.S. Information Agency (USIA) presented a
|
||
report to Congress entitled "Soviet Activities in the Glasnost
|
||
Era" written by Herbert Romerstein of the USIA. The report
|
||
reminded Congress that the Honduran official at the origin of the
|
||
affair had retracted his statement, but did not mention that he
|
||
had done so only after having been reprimanded by the President
|
||
of Honduras. According to the USIA, the Guatemalan newspaper had
|
||
merely refurbished the Honduran story. No mention at all was made
|
||
in the USIA report of the very specific accusations made by
|
||
officials of two different governments.
|
||
|
||
The attitude of the United States has never changed. According to
|
||
the U.S., the rumor is the result of a Soviet-Cuban propaganda
|
||
campaign. Those who sound the alarm, whether they be ministers,
|
||
judges, lawyers, bishops, or organizations such as Defense of
|
||
Children International or the International Association of
|
||
Democratic Jurists, are denounced as "affiliated with Moscow."
|
||
{6}. In September 1988, when the European Parliament voted a
|
||
resolution condemning the traffic in organs, the assistant
|
||
Secretary of State in Washington, Richard Schifter, accused the
|
||
Parliament of propagating "shameless lies" invented by the
|
||
Soviets.
|
||
|
||
In August 1988 the revelations of Judge Angel Campos in Asuncion,
|
||
Paraguay, attracted a lot of attention. The police broke up an
|
||
organization that was exporting children from Brazil, using
|
||
Paraguay as an intermediary staging area. The question Judge
|
||
Campos asked was: "Are they going to be adopted or dissected?"
|
||
What had alerted the judge that there was something wrong was the
|
||
fact that the children were being adopted by people "who did not
|
||
seem to care whether the child walked with a limp, or had a
|
||
harelip, or was born with an arm missing." Judge Campos expressed
|
||
his intention of investigating this in depth, stating that the
|
||
traffic in organs was a taboo subject, and a crime which is
|
||
extremely difficult to prove. Judge Campos was then summoned to
|
||
the U.S. embassy, which issued a statement that during the
|
||
interview the judge had said: "At no time did I imply that the
|
||
organs of the children were to be used for transplants in the
|
||
United States."
|
||
|
||
However, new incidents kept occurring. On Nov. 14, 1988, the
|
||
Peruvian press reported the story of Rosita, a little girl whose
|
||
eyes had been taken. {8}. In Lima, the police raided medical
|
||
facilities linked with the Mafia, while the Bishop of Chimbote,
|
||
Monsignor Luis Armando Bambarem, declared that children who are
|
||
poor and handicapped "are being murdered to obtain their organs."
|
||
|
||
According to the report submitted to the Parliament of Brazil
|
||
last December, seven thousand children have been killed during
|
||
the last four years. A professor of theology at Sao Paulo
|
||
University, Father Barruel, appealed to the United Nations,
|
||
saying that "75 percent of the bodies had internal mutilations,
|
||
and in the majority of cases the eyes had been taken."
|
||
|
||
In Mexico, the accusations continue to accumulate. On June 24,
|
||
1989, the correspondent at Puebla for the newspaper *El
|
||
Universal* denounced the abduction of three children, specifying
|
||
"In a village on the banks of the Cuichol river, a child was
|
||
kidnapped. He was found several weeks later at Tlatlauquitipec,
|
||
about 50 kilometers from his home. He had been operated on, and
|
||
had one kidney missing. He is in the hospital at Puebla." The
|
||
journalist adds: "The lack of names is caused by the panic which
|
||
strikes the families. People have refused to give me more precise
|
||
information because they are afraid of reprisals." {9}.
|
||
|
||
In May 1990, the assistant District Attorney for the federal
|
||
district of Mexico, Gustavo Bareta Rangel, declared that the
|
||
disappearances of children "could be related to the traffic in
|
||
organs, which is going on at the northern frontier of this
|
||
country." {10}. In October, the Commission for Population
|
||
Development of the Chamber of Deputies created a committee to
|
||
investigate. The president of the department of health, education
|
||
and social services for the federal district, Hector Ramirez
|
||
Cuellar, specified that his committee would go to the frontier
|
||
where, between Tijuana and Rosarito, the existence of clandestine
|
||
clinics is suspected. He added that the abducted children could
|
||
be "used to fulfill the needs of numerous foreigners who arrive
|
||
there in expectation of a transplant." {11}.
|
||
|
||
Clandestine clinics on the frontier between Mexico and the United
|
||
States were also denounced in Italy, when the scandal of "dealer
|
||
in children" Lucas Di Nuzzo became public. In four years, four
|
||
thousand Brazilian children, who had been provided with visas,
|
||
arrived in Italy for adoption. One thousand of them were located,
|
||
but the other three thousand had disappeared without a trace.
|
||
Oddly enough, many of the requests for adoption came from the
|
||
Campania region, noted for its large families with many children
|
||
-- as well as for its high degree of Mafia control. Two Italian
|
||
judges, Angelo Gargani and Cesar Martinello, went to Salvador de
|
||
Bahia in Brazil. Upon their return, they warned the government
|
||
that the Mafia was operating "a traffic in the organs of
|
||
children." These children were sent to clandestine clinics in
|
||
Mexico and Thailand, but also in Europe, where they were
|
||
dissected for their organs. The Italian government requested help
|
||
from Interpol. {12}.
|
||
|
||
Since 1987 in the developed countries, the demand for transplants
|
||
has greatly increased. Ciclosporin slows down the reactions of
|
||
rejection. Viaspan, discovered by two American researchers and
|
||
manufactured by DuPont, extends the transportation and
|
||
conservation times of the organs (32 hours for a liver instead of
|
||
8; 12 hours for a heart instead of 4). Thanks to the progress of
|
||
science, the human body has become a valuable source of raw
|
||
materials. Blood, organs, tissue, bone, sperm, ova, corneas,
|
||
skin, embryos and placenta all now have commercial value. And
|
||
traffic of all kinds in these materials is multiplying. {13}.
|
||
|
||
In 1990 the World Health Organization adopted directing
|
||
principles, the first of which stipulates that "no organ can be
|
||
taken from a living minor for transplant purposes... From the
|
||
beginning, one of the characteristics of organ transplants has
|
||
been the lack of organs. The supply has never been sufficient to
|
||
meet the demand. This shortage has brought about an increase in
|
||
the commercial traffic of human organs. Fear has also been
|
||
expressed concerning the possibility of a traffic in human
|
||
beings." {14}.
|
||
|
||
Indeed, proliferating scandals reveal the existence of a sinister
|
||
black market. The terrible misery of third-world populations
|
||
makes them an easy target for unscrupulous businessmen. Dr.
|
||
Crockett, an English kidney specialist, lost his license to
|
||
practice medicine for life in 1989, because he had organized a
|
||
network that obtained kidneys in Turkey. One year later, *Lancet*
|
||
revealed that 130 people between 6 and 60 years of age had gone
|
||
to Bombay for kidney transplants. The Indian doctors justify this
|
||
commerce, which is particularly widespread in Bombay and Madras,
|
||
under the pretext that the donors "volunteer" because they are in
|
||
need of money. {15}.
|
||
|
||
In Latin America, three recent scandals prove that this
|
||
catastrophic commerce is on the increase. In February 1992, in
|
||
Argentina, the minister of health admitted that the director of
|
||
the Montes de Oca psychiatric clinic, located near Buenos Aires,
|
||
had been taking blood and organs, especially corneas, from the
|
||
patients in the facility. The investigation still goes on to find
|
||
out the destination of the organs, as well as of the many
|
||
children born in the establishment. The minister revealed some
|
||
frightening statistics: between 1986 and 1992, one-thousand
|
||
three-hundred and twenty-one of these psychiatric patients died.
|
||
The swamps surrounding the clinic are being dragged in an attempt
|
||
to find out what became of an additional one-thousand three-
|
||
hundred and ninety-five patients who simply disappeared. {16}.
|
||
|
||
For a long time Argentina has been considered a country in which
|
||
there was a traffic in organs. As far back as 1985, Judge
|
||
Mahiquez had ordered an investigation of accusations that Montes
|
||
de Oca was dealing commercially in blood and organs. One year
|
||
later, the investigation was closed. In 1987 the minister of
|
||
health began a new investigation of the persistent rumors about a
|
||
traffic in children used as organ donors. One year later, the
|
||
rumors were declared to be without foundation. However, last
|
||
December the minister prudently admitted: "Traffic in children
|
||
and organs does exist." {17}.
|
||
|
||
After Argentina, it was the turn of Columbia. At the beginning of
|
||
March 1992, a chamber of horrors reminiscent of Dr. Frankenstein
|
||
was discovered. The corpses of ten paupers, one of them a 15-
|
||
year-old girl, were found in the amphitheater of Barranquilla
|
||
Faculty of Medicine. The remains of forty other persons had
|
||
decomposed to the point that they could not be identified. The
|
||
procedure used by the faculty's security patrol had been to
|
||
strike beggars over the head with baseball bats until the victims
|
||
were in a state of coma. They were not killed until after their
|
||
organs of commercial value had been extracted, which were sold on
|
||
the black market. What remained of the cadavers was then turned
|
||
over to the medical students for dissection purposes, or disposed
|
||
of in the garbage. {18}.
|
||
|
||
Colombia discovered with dismay and fright the substance of the
|
||
rumor about the massacre of the "desechables" (throwaways), as
|
||
the homeless adults and abandoned children are called, in order
|
||
to provide stock for organ banks. It was in October 1989 that the
|
||
Bogota daily newspaper *El Tiempo*, then Dr. Nestor Alvarez
|
||
Segura on Radio Cadena Nacional, reported that street children
|
||
had been found murdered and with their eyes removed. In March
|
||
1990, Antenna 2 broadcast the report of the tribulations agency
|
||
which, in the Compartir de Soacha district near Bogota, had
|
||
caught on film the abduction of a young girl and her subsequent
|
||
return to her family after her eyes had been removed. In October
|
||
1991 in this same city, community groups organized a
|
||
demonstration to protest against the disappearances of children.
|
||
A farmer named Garrido Mesa testified in front of TV cameras to
|
||
having found near a gutter the body of a four-year-old boy, from
|
||
whom the eyes had been removed. According to *El Tiempo*: "At
|
||
first the officials of the institute of family services at
|
||
Cundinamarca refused to believe Garrido Mesa. They were obliged
|
||
to admit that he had told the truth, as the doctor who signed the
|
||
death certificate of the unidentified child at the local hospital
|
||
confirmed that the eyes had been removed." {19}.
|
||
|
||
Judge Ines Valderrama was placed in charge of the investigation.
|
||
She looked all over Soacha, but was unable to find either the
|
||
family of the child or Garrido Mesa. At Cundinamarca, the doctors
|
||
and officials all said they knew nothing of the matter. Judge
|
||
Valderrama requested access to the archives of the Institute of
|
||
Legal Medicine, which is where unidentified cadavers are taken.
|
||
She was told by those in charge that such research is impossible
|
||
because of the great number of cases. However, since the affair
|
||
of the "desechables" at the Faculty of Medicine, people are
|
||
speaking out.
|
||
|
||
Last April in Uruguay, an organization was broken up that had
|
||
been sending adult "volunteers" to Brazilian clinics to have a
|
||
kidney removed. Among the clients of the organization who had
|
||
benefitted from transplanted kidneys taken from the poor were the
|
||
assistant Minister of Foreign Relations of the military
|
||
dictatorship, Filiberto Ginzo Gil, and the Minister of Industry
|
||
under former President Sanguinetti, Jorge Presno.
|
||
|
||
In spite of the investigations which always end inconclusively,
|
||
in spite of the officials who retract their previous statements,
|
||
in spite of the witnesses and victims who disappear, the pieces
|
||
of the puzzle are being fitted together. The so-called rumor is
|
||
not without substance. Mexico is a country in a prominent
|
||
position as far as this matter is concerned, since kidney
|
||
transplants on children have been going on there since 1970. In
|
||
Columbia, it is the theft of corneas which is dominant. This
|
||
country has an old and prestigious tradition of ophthamology and
|
||
there are cornea banks in all the major cities.
|
||
|
||
The existence of a horrifying clandestine commerce, of which the
|
||
miserable populations of the underdeveloped countries are
|
||
victims, can no longer be credibly denied. After gold, silver and
|
||
precious stones; after oil, coffee and cotton; will the demand
|
||
for organs become a modern version of the plundering of the South
|
||
by the North? Why should the children be spared, since the
|
||
shortage of organs is so great?
|
||
|
||
On May 6, 1991, during a meeting of a sub-committee of the United
|
||
Nations assigned to study modern forms of slavery, several
|
||
members of the committee recommended an international
|
||
investigation of this subject. In his final documentation the
|
||
special reporter for the United Nations, Vitit Muntarbhorn,
|
||
states that although it is very difficult to prove the existence
|
||
of this traffic, the circumstantial evidence continues to
|
||
increase. {20}.
|
||
|
||
Part of this circumstantial evidence is the proliferation of
|
||
illegal adoption networks, the colossal amounts of money raised
|
||
by them, and the enormous demand which causes waves of abductions
|
||
in Latin America. [CN -- Perhaps related abductions of children
|
||
here in the U.S. as well?] A real slave trade in children, going
|
||
from the South to the North, has been established, which can not
|
||
be satisfactorily explained in terms of adoption networks
|
||
catering to sexual deviates.
|
||
|
||
The Latin-American bishops at the Franciscan missionary center in
|
||
Bonn are also astonished by the extent of the phenomenon.
|
||
Monsignor Nicola de Jesus Lopez Rodriguez, Archbishop of Saint
|
||
Domingo and President of the Latin-American Episcopal Council,
|
||
has declared that the Church is going to "follow up on all
|
||
complaints concerning the sale of children for illegal adoptions
|
||
or organ transplants." {21}. American lawyer Patrick Gagel was
|
||
arrested in Peru last February, after having exported a total of
|
||
three thousand children in thirty months to the United States and
|
||
Italy. What became of these children? How come Patrick Gagel was
|
||
almost immediately released from prison, as have others arrested
|
||
for this crime? Won't any government formally demand intervention
|
||
by Interpol, since this is the required condition for a real
|
||
international investigation? Must we wait for more horrifying
|
||
discoveries before we dare to admit the awful truth?
|
||
|
||
+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
|
||
|
||
The preceding article originally appeared in *LeMonde
|
||
Diplomatique* (August 1992) and was translated by George Andrews
|
||
and then reprinted in *PARANOIA: The Conspiracy Reader*, Issue
|
||
#4. Back issues are available at a cost of $4 USA, $7
|
||
International. Write to Paranoia, PO Box 3570, Cranston, RI
|
||
02910. For a one year subscription (4 issues), write to the same
|
||
address ($12 USA, $18 Canada, $24 International).
|
||
|
||
--------------------------<< Notes >>----------------------------
|
||
{1} *La Jornada*, Mexico, March 8, 1992.
|
||
{2} *El Sol*, Mexico, March 13, 1992.
|
||
{3} *International Children's Rights Monitor*, April 1, 1987.
|
||
{4} *El Tiempo*, Bogota, January 9, 1987.
|
||
{5} *El Grafico*, Guatemala City, January 24 and 27, 1988.
|
||
{6} This theme was recently taken up by *le Nouvel Observateur*
|
||
in Paris, on June 11, 1992, in an article by Vincent Jauvert, "La
|
||
rumeur du KGB."
|
||
{7} *El Diario*, Asuncion, August 7, 1988; *O Globo*, August 8,
|
||
1988.
|
||
{8} *El Comercio*, Lima, November 14, 1988.
|
||
{9} *El Universal*, Mexico, June 24, 1989.
|
||
{10} *El Universal*, May 7, 1990.
|
||
{11} *La Jornada*, Mexico, October 10 and 23, 1990.
|
||
{12} *La Republica*, September 17, 1990; *The Guardian*,
|
||
September 19, 1990.
|
||
{13} As to the ethical problems this poses, see "L'homme en
|
||
danger de science?" in Maniere de voir, no. 15, May 1992.
|
||
{14} W.H.O., *General Report*, November 19, 1990.
|
||
{15} *L'Evenement du jeudi*, July 18, 1991.
|
||
{16} *Clarin*, Buenos Aires, Feb. 23, 1992.
|
||
{17} *Liberation*, December 12, 1991.
|
||
{18} *Semana*, Bogota, October 13, 1991.
|
||
{19} *El Tiempo*, Bogota, October 13, 1991.
|
||
{20} Vitit Muntarbhorn, "Report Before the Commission on Human
|
||
Rights," January 28, 1991, and "Report of the International
|
||
Association of Democratic Jurists before the UN sub-committee on
|
||
contemporary forms of slavery," June 15, 1991.
|
||
{21} *Bulletin d'information missionaire*, July 23, 1991.
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
I encourage distribution of "Conspiracy Nation."
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
If you would like "Conspiracy Nation" sent to your e-mail
|
||
address, send a message in the form "subscribe conspire My Name"
|
||
to listproc@prairienet.org -- To cancel, send a message in the
|
||
form "unsubscribe conspire" to listproc@prairienet.org
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Aperi os tuum muto, et causis omnium filiorum qui pertranseunt.
|
||
Aperi os tuum, decerne quod justum est, et judica inopem et
|
||
pauperem. -- Liber Proverbiorum XXXI: 8-9
|
||
|
||
|