A dead body of a woman was found amidst ruins by a rescue team after an earthquake erupted in china. The body was covered by bricks, broken glass, mud: blood. The woman was in a knelt posture, which seemed like she was trying to protect the treasure buried beneath her, like a guardian angel. When the team unclenched the woman 's wings to see the treasure she was guarding, they saw a small child, alive, sleeping in the comfort of his warm, dead mother 's body. The three year old gem was wrapped in a flowery, soft blanket with a mobile phone inside. What it read on the mobile phone made every person there, weep and sob dramatically like a child. What it read on the phone was heart-warming, enough love …show more content…
The term organ trafficking refers to the illegal trade which harvests organs from the poor, the abducted and the captives and then sells them to the people who are in desperate need of an organ transplant. It involves not just criminals but doctors, businessmen, policemen and even politicians who exploit poverty and the urgent need for organ transplants. The irritatingly interminable organ transplant waiting list and crucial need for a transplant, allures many people into abdicating their morality and forming an alliance with the devils of the black organ market for a transplant. Reported in March 2015, Organ trafficking harvests over £ 100 million from the population every year and over 100,000 organs were being trafficked annually. Prevailing all over the world, it mostly haunts the developing countries such as India, China, Pakistan, and Bangladesh. Though the rates change, kidney sells for £70,000, liver sells for £850,000 and heart sales can even sky rocket to …show more content…
What is better than saving lives? People argue that in this "business" the organ donor and the recipient both benefit equally. They highlight how the organ donors earn a substantial amount of money and the recipient buys the "products" at a bargain and on time. Anthony Gregory, research editor, wrote a book which manipulates the statics to emphasize the need for legalisation of organ trade. He highlighted the approximate death of 80,000 who were waiting for an organ transplant. That is depressing. But he overshadowed the hundreds of thousands benign souls being slaughtered for organs. Organs donated by family or friends, and by charities and non-profit companies are only legal, though organ trafficking is argued by some to be the modern robin hood, voluntarily providing for to the poor. However what they fail to emphasise on, Robin Hood never betrayed and plundered from the poor and the