"Governments should be monitoring who are the donors, who can be the recipients"
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VATICAN CITY, June 22 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Governments around the world need to do more to stop thousands of organs being trafficked every year, including strengthening legislation and improving regulation of hospitals, an advisor to the World Health Organization said on Friday.
Only a handful of countries including the United States, Spain
"In the transplantation sphere, governments should be monitoring who are the donors, who can be the recipients," Delmonico told the Thomson Reuters Foundation at a conference
"At the moment, this transparency doesn't exist."
Organ transplants save thousands of lives every year, but experts say demand far outstrips supply, creating illicit markets and "transplant tourists" who travel to countries to have operations they cannot get at home.
Since 2000, organ trafficking has spread from mainly South and Southeast Asian countries to Latin America, North Africa and other regions afflicted by poverty and political instability, according to a 2015 document for the European Parliament.
It said a World Health Organization (WHO) 2007 estimate found around 5-10 percent of all kidney and liver transplants performed globally are conducted with illicitly obtained organs
Delmonico said the illicit nature of the trade made it difficult to measure its impact, but that global inequality made the poor "ripe for exploitation".
"It's a social injustice issue," he said. "Who are getting (organs)? People who are rich! Who is providing this? People who are poor and dying."
In 2016, Pope Francis called organ trafficking one of the "new forms of slavery" and a crime against humanity.
Delmonico also called on the U.S. State Department to include the illicit practice in its annual Trafficking in Human Persons Report, which ranks countries on their anti-trafficking efforts.
"Please don't exclude organ trafficking. They should see it, just as the Pope said, as a human slavery problem," he said.
(Reporting by Thin Lei Win, Editing by Claire Cozens. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women's rights, trafficking, property rights, climate change and resilience. Visit http://news.trust.org)
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