Monday, March 10, 2008

Brave New World by Mumia Abu-Jamal

[col. writ. 2/6/08] (c) '08 Mumia Abu-Jamal

For several years in the '80's and '90's, stories raced throughcommunities of people being seduced, drugged, and when they awakened, to theirhorror, an internal organ, like a kidney, had been removed.

Several horror movies played on these fears, and undoubtedly attractedsignificant viewers and money, by stoking these fears.

Recently, it has been reported that there is a brisk and bustlingbusiness in a country touted as 'the world's largest democracy', where the illicitsale of kidneys has become a kind of cottage industry!

In India, that nation-state that dominates the Asian subcontinent, withover a billion residents (according to a July 2006 estimate), is also home toan industry where almost everyone benefits, except the poor sap who onceowned the kidney!

People told of waking up with searing pain in their abdomens, at least500 such people, usually poor laborers, rickshaw drivers, or farmers on thebrink of peonage.

Many of the men were offered jobs, and indeed some were told openly whatwas wanted, for a payment of between $1,000 and $2,500.

The men were approached by kidney scouts in Delhi, or Uttar Pradesh,one of the poorer regions of the country.

The ring, composed of dozens of paramedics, doctors, nurses, privatehospitals and pathology clinics, were acquiring the organs for use by richIndians and foreigners, according to published accounts.

Organs for sale?

There is a malevolent logic to this practice in this, the age ofglobalism, where everything - everything - is for sale to the highest bidder.

There is something nightmarish, ghoulish, and Frankensteinian about thispractice, but it is also a telling commentary on how the rich regard the poor among them.

For the men who've had their organs snatched, almost none of them hadbeen paid the promised fee, even if they willingly agreed to the sale.

They were taken to a clinic, their blood was tested, and they werethreatened by armed guards to neither resist, nor tell about the practice.

This is the shadow side, the unstated reference point to the free market.

That said, India isn't a poor country. Its GDP is about three timesthat of Great Britain, its former colonial power. Its economy is one of thefastest growing on earth.

Yet, this illustrates how great wealth may exist amidst great poverty.This ain't hatin' on India, for great distances between wealth andpoverty isn't an Indian peculiarity: it is a global one.

It is globalism made plain; everything for sale.

-- (c) '08 maj

{Source: Gentleman, Amelia, "Kidney Theft Ring Preys on India's PoorestLaborers, " New York Times, Wed., Jan. 30, 2008, p.A3}

No comments: