The defendant met a person named Yehia who coerced him to sell his kidney for 1500 dollars. The defendant traveled to Iraq with Yehia, who confiscated the defendant’s passport upon arrival, gave it to a man named Talal, and received 500 dollars in return. Talal then took the defendant to Al-Khayyal Hospital in Baghdad and performed a surgery to remove his left kidney. Once the defendant returned to Jordan, he found 500 dollars in his bank account.
Later, Yehia met with the defendant and asked him to accompany two men to Iraq to sell their kidneys. The defendant accompanied the two men to Iraq, took them to Talal, and received 300 dollars in return. While the defendant was in Iraq, the 300 dollars was stolen. The defendant was forced to return to Jordan without money and had to leave his passport in Iraq. At a later date, the defendant falsely notified the Security Center that his passport was lost. As a result, he was referred to the Anti-Corruption Directorate and was prosecuted.
The acts he committed, including selling his kidney and convincing three persons to sell their kidneys for 1300 dollars, are prohibited in Articles 10 and 4/c of the Jordanian Law on the Utilization of Human Organs. In addition, leaving his passport with the driver is prohibited under Article 18/b of the Passports Law.
The Court sentenced the defendant to one year in prison for each act committed offences under Articles 10 and 4/c of the Law on the Utilization of Human Organs. The defendant was also sentenced to 6 months in prison for violating Article 18/b of the Passports Law.
Trafficking in persons type of offence
Articles 10 and 4/c of the Law on the Utilization of Human Organs
Donating an organ in exchange for money
Article 18/b of the Jordanian Passports law
Violation of passport law