[This prosecution clearly violates the student's freedom and consumer
sovereignty, not to mention those of the doctors and other medical
personnel involved. Clearly Wang balanced the expected benefits of
getting the IPhone and IPad against the expected costs and then
decided rationally to go ahead with the operation. How can the Nanny
State violate his freedom? Don't consumers know what's best,
especially compared to the paternalistic bureaucrats -- the
paternocrats! -- of the Communist Party?? If consumers want to get
IPods and IPad in exchange for kidneys, the market will provide. All
hail the Invisible Hand!  ;-) ]

Chinese Teen Sells Kidney To Buy IPhone, IPad

by The Associated Press

BEIJING April 7, 2012, 03:26 am ET [from
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=150177159 ]

BEIJING (AP) — Authorities have indicted five people in central China
for involvement in illegal organ trading after a teenager sold one of
his kidneys to buy an iPhone and an iPad.

The case has prompted an outpouring of concern that not enough is
being done to guard against the negative impact of increasing
consumerism in Chinese society, particularly among young people who
have grown up with more creature comforts than the generations before
them.

Prosecutors in the city of Chenzhou charged the suspects with
intentional injury for organizing the removal and transplant of a
kidney from a 17-year-old high school student surnamed Wang, the
official Xinhua News Agency said late Friday.

A woman on duty Saturday at the Chenzhou Beihu District People's
Procuratorate in Hunan province confirmed that prosecutors are
handling the case and that the defendants are facing charges of
intentional injury.

She refused to give her name and referred further questions to the
city-level procuratorate's media office, where phone calls rang
unanswered.

The defendants include a surgeon, a hospital contractor, and brokers
who looked for donors online and leased an operating room to conduct
the procedure, Xinhua said.

It said about 1.5 million people in China need organ transplants, but
that only about 10,000 transplants are performed each year, fueling
the illegal trade in organs.

Xinhua described one of the defendants named He Wei as being broke and
frustrated over gambling debts. It said he asked another defendant to
look for organ donors in online chat rooms and someone else to lease
an operating room for the transplant, which took place in April last
year.

He received 220,000 yuan ($35,000) for the transplant, gave the
student 22,000 yuan ($3,500) and shared the remaining money with the
other defendants and several medical staff involved in the operation,
Xinhua said.

When the student returned home, he was asked how he could afford a new
iPhone and an iPad and he told his mother that he sold one of his
kidneys, the report said.

The Southern Daily newspaper reported last month that other
individuals have sold, or seriously considered selling, their kidneys
to earn money for reasons that included paying off large debts, making
a payment on a smartphone, or paying for an abortion for a girlfriend.

"Without facing complete hardship, these young people born after the
1990s made rash decisions. In the choice between their bodies and
materialism, they resolutely chose the latter," the official Communist
Party newspaper Guangming Daily said in an editorial late last month
about the Southern Daily report.

"In today's society where desires are infinite and demands are
boundless ... blindly competing with others in the pursuit of high-end
'technology' will gradually ruin lives," it said.

-- 
Jim Devine / "In science one tries to tell people, in such a way as to
be understood by everyone, something that no one ever knew before. But
in poetry, it's the exact opposite." -- Paul Dirac. Social science is
in the middle.... and usually in a muddle.
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