‘Blood type O. DM me’: Myanmar’s poorest are so desperate they’re turning to social media to sell their kidneys. He had recently been detained and tortured by the country’s military junta for weeks, he said, on suspicion of transporting goods for opposition forces, during which time his wife had been forced to take out loans to support the family. When he was finally released, he had lost his job and the family found themselves penniless and ridden with debt. Desperate, Maung Maung went on Facebook and offered to sell his kidney.
“In that moment, I felt life was so harsh. There is no other way I could survive other than to rob or kill people for money,” he said. “My wife was the same, she didn’t want to stay in this world anymore. But only for the sake of our daughter we stayed. Poverty is so bad in Myanmar that people are offering to sell their kidneys online. Hear one man's story.
‘Blood type O. DM me’: Myanmar’s poorest are so desperate they’re turning to social media to sell their kidneys Updated Fri August 30, 2024
Delivery driver Maung Maung’s wife and young daughter hadn’t eaten in three days, he recalled, when he walked into an internet cafe in his hometown of Mandalay, Myanmar, in late 2022. He recently been detained, tortured by country’s military junta for weeks, he said, on suspicion of transporting goods for opposition forces, during which time his wife had been forced to take out loans to support the family. When he was finally released, he had lost his job and the family found themselves penniless and ridden with debt. Desperate, Maung Maung went on Facebook and offered to sell his kidney.
“In that moment, I felt life was so harsh. There is no other way I could survive other than to rob or kill people for money,” he said. “My wife was the same, she didn’t want to stay in this world anymore. But only for the sake of our daughter we stayed.” Months later in July 2023, Maung Maung, who asked to use a pseudonym for safety reasons, traveled to India for the transplant surgery. A wealthy Chinese-Burmese businessman had bought his kidney for 10 million Burmese kyat ($3,079), nearly twice the annual average urban household income in Myanmar, according to 2019 data from UN affiliated Myanmar Information Management Unit.
Maung Maung is not the only one.
A yr-long CNN investigation revealed desperate people in Myanmar, known as Burma, hawking their organs to wealthy people on Facebook. With help of agents, travel to India, for instance, for transplants — defying laws in both countries, where selling organs is illegal.
CNN found posts offering to sell organs @least 3-Burmese-language Facebook gups & spoke to 2 dozen people involved in organ trade — including sellers, buyers & agents — to piece together the inner workings of an illicit industry fueled by desperation in a country ravaged by civil war.
https://edition.cnn.com/2024/08/30/asia/...index.html