Patients were each told to pay 400,000-600,000 yuan ($57,620-86,430)
while those selling kidneys received a mere 40,000 yuan.
Sixteen people including two
surgeons have been jailed for between two and five years in China for
trafficking in human organs, a practice still widespread in the country.
The
group -- which also included an anaesthesiologist, a nurse and an
assistant doctor -- were involved in a vast illegal trade in kidneys,
according to the judgement cited by the official Xinhua news agency
Saturday.
Patients were each told to pay 400,000-600,000 yuan ($57,620-86,430) while those selling kidneys received a mere 40,000 yuan.
China
in 2007 issued its first regulations on human organ transplants,
banning organisations and individuals from trading in organs.
But trafficking cases are still common in China, which suffers a drastic shortage of donated organs.
Chines tradition dictates that a corpse be buried without mutilation.
For
decades most transplants used the organs of executed convicts, often
without the consent of their families, according to rights groups --
allegations denied by authorities.
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