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Blood racket drained poor Indians, police say

Poor preyed upon; doctors fear addicts among victims, tainting supply

Image: Blood racket victim
Durga Prasad, a blood racket victim, recuperates in the District Hospital in Gorakhpur, India, on March 23. Prasad and 14 others were rescued two weeks ago from a small filthy room inside a house in the slums of Gorakhpur, police said.
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updated 9:15 p.m. ET April 3, 2008

GORAKHPUR, India - When Durga Prasad heard of the mysterious job with the hefty paycheck, he jumped at it, no questions asked.

The work could be risky — Prasad figured he'd be asked to smuggle drugs into Nepal — but for the itinerant laborer from Uttar Pradesh, one of the poorest states in India, the money was worth it: 250 rupees a day, about $6.

"I knew it must be some illegal work because no one pays so much money to an illiterate person like me," Prasad said.

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The salary turned out to be part of a trap that ensnared Prasad and 14 other poor laborers, who were held captive while their blood was drained for sale to private medical clinics.

The case has raised concerns about medical oversight in India — a nation eager to attract some of the hundreds of thousands of Americans who go to Asian hospitals for cheaper medical care each year.

Five men have been arrested in the illegal racket, but authorities are still searching for the suspected ringleader, police official Brij Lal said.

Victims rescued
Prasad and the 14 others were rescued two weeks ago from a small filthy room inside a house in the slums of Gorakhpur, a town about 155 miles southeast of Lucknow, the capital of Uttar Pradesh, police said.

Towns like this have largely missed out on the prosperity of India's booming economy, and the blood racket victims are among the 300 million who live on less than a dollar a day. Desperate laborers often get caught in dangerous scams — earlier this year, police raided a home in a wealthy New Delhi suburb where doctors were allegedly drugging the poor and stealing their kidneys.

Some of the men in Gorakhpur apparently sold their blood willingly, but the payments stopped early on, and they said that when they asked for money they were beaten.

Rustam Khan, another victim, said he came to Gorakhpur from West Bengal state to earn money to pay for his daughter's wedding.

"I sold my blood for money ... Still I could not arrange money for my daughter's marriage," he said.

Preying on the poor
While cases like these highlight the vulnerability of the poor, they also raise serious concerns about the complicity of the medical establishment and the lack of proper oversight over hospitals and clinics — a problem for a country trying to position itself as a leading destination for so-called medical tourism.

With an estimated 45 million uninsured Americans, some 500,000 trek overseas each year for medical treatment, according to the National Coalition on Health Care — much of it at Asian hospitals in Thailand, Singapore and India.

The low cost of medical care in India has made it a popular destination for Americans and other foreigners in need of everything from tummy tucks to hip replacements or heart surgery.

While India has a range of laws overseeing medical care, enforcement is often exceedingly lax and corruption is widespread. Screening donors for illegal drug use or exposure to diseases like AIDS, hepatitis B or C, or malaria is usually left to individual clinics and hospitals. In India, a nation of 1.1 billion, some 2.5 million people are infected with HIV, according to international AIDS experts and Indian health officials.


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