How much is your dead body worth?
We have all heard those silly expressions like “I would give my right arm for that” referring to something unattainably expensive, but how far would one go if the situation was desperate, would one actually give their right arm?
Today it is a possibility as the illegal trade in organs and tissues booms. There is a great demand for organs as the ratio of those in need of organs outweighs the amount of donors available. Demand has to be met with supply, and with a space in the market to make some money people are going to fill it, however illegal it may be.
The World Health Organisation in 1991 produced guidelines to prevent this sort of trading in organs. These are seen more as a recommendation and are not law, but have been accepted by 192 countries.
Due to the non-binding factor though these can be overlooked and in cases like Iran have been - a country where a system of trading organs has been legalised. Increased numbers of people looking for the transplants are now travelling abroad to get them, to places like China and Iran.
http://www.thecollegeview.com/2008/12/14/how-much-is-your-dead-body-worth/Remember "Funeralgate"?
NOBLE, Georgia (CNN) -- A county judge issued a gag order Thursday in the case of a crematory operator accused of failing to cremate hundreds of bodies and hiding them on his northwest Georgia property instead.
Walker County Superior Court Judge Ralph Hill issued the order in the early evening. It cut short a news briefing by law enforcement officials near Tri-State Crematory in Noble, near Georgia's borders with Tennessee and Alabama.
Before the order was announced, Georgia Chief Medical Examiner Kris Sperry said investigators had completed emptying six burial vaults found on the crematory's grounds. The vaults, each designed to hold one body, contained 67 sets of remains, Sperry said.
(remains? what was taken OUT of those remains?)
Read more,story is from sources at this link.
http://www.apfn.net/messageboard/10-26-03/discussion.cgi.163.html