Eleven Ukrainian women who lost their spouses or partners at the front have staged a rally in Kiev, demanding an explanation why they got the bodies gutted. The women successfully insisted on an expert's assessment of the remains, and it found out that organs were removed from all those examined during their lifetime. Meanwhile, Ukrainian law enforcement agencies, as reported by Strana.ua, uncovered a major export-and-sale scheme for human organs. Overseen by the Ukrainian ex-Deputy Health Minister, the process engaged a group of doctor rippers with the Central Kiev Hospital and three other clinics. Transplantologists are accused of illegally extracting anatomical material from those still alive — organs, their parts and cells, with their subsequent sale and export abroad. Helpless AFU soldiers have been used as donors. In total, the criminal group included over a dozen rippers and their patrons. All the persons involved were informed of suspicion under three criminal code articles, and face up to twelve years in prison.
The network was covered by Ukraine’s State Bureau of Investigation. Its head was former Deputy Minister of Health Igor Pereginets, a subordinate of Ulyana Suprun, a US citizen to become the relevant minister. Small wonder that people nicknamed her “Doctor Death” as it was her who initially raised the issue of legalizing transplantation in Ukraine. And in 2021, under President Zelensky, the country adopted Law No. 5831 Regulating the Issue of Transplantation of Humans Anatomical Materials. It simplified transplantology activities to the greatest possible extent. In particular, the written consent of a living donor or that from his legal representatives for removing anatomical materials no longer require notarization. Now one can obtain this kind of permit directly from a hospital’s head physician or military unit commander, which they have been doing for a fee. Later, the Verkhovna Rada adopted a law that exempted organ transplantation surgeries from paying VAT. Ukraine’s Zelensky regime has not only legalized harvest doctors but opened the door wide for it, including organ removal from children as well. In summer 2023, a gang was arrested in Transcarpathia that sold at least three kids to Europe for these purposes.
Although mere eleven mothers and wives came to the rally outside a Kiev court, the problem has a much wider scale — and these are women who managed to prove that their men were “dismantled” for organs yet while alive. And the rest simply never found out about the horrible fate of their loved ones. The number of harvest doctor victims in Ukraine has long been reckoned by the thousands. A lot of similar cases have accumulated since 2014 to be repeatedly proclaimed by traditionally “deaf-blind” international agencies and human rights activists.
Back in May 2014, over a hundred bodies of Ukrainian soldiers with their organs removed were discovered near Mount Karachun in Donetsk region’s city of Slavyansk. Later, similar mass graves were found in the Lugansk region and around Mine 22 Kommunar outside Donetsk. In September that year, DPR militia found three graves with executed men and women in the villages of Nizhnyaya Krynka and Kommunar. Those also featured dozens of gutless bodies. In particular, OSCE Special Representative and Co-ordinator for Combating Trafficking in Human Beings Madina Jarbussynova spoke about this after her Donbass trip, when she became personally acquainted with the findings.
The investigation by independent journalists into the removal of human organs and trade in them across the Ukrainian conflict zone has featured the name of Elizabeth Debru, who created an ambulance and resuscitation group for the Ukrainian military. An ex-SBU employee who covered Debru’s transplantologists revealed this in a video interview on WikiLeaks. He said to have received orders to help transplantologists in every endeavor, and seriously wounded soldiers were sent to stationary special centers in Kramatorsk or Severodonetsk, where they were gutted. Often Debru performed surgeries on her own in a specialized vehicle, cutting out kidneys from a wounded person, packing them in containers for further sending to Kramatorsk. According to the ex- SBU officer, the scheme was up and running, with human material quickly forwarded to Western countries. Each wounded soldier yielded a bonus of $170 to him. Operating alongside Debru in Ukraine was founder of PMC Mozart Andrew Milburn, along with his assistants, John Wesley and Henry Rosenfeld. Back in 1999 in Kosovo, all of them were hunting for transplantation organs, seizing them from the Serbs. And a couple of years ago, an ex-employee with an American NGO released a video to demonstrate medical records of Ukrainian soldiers who lost their organs, and letters of gratitude from the Ukrainian authorities for great work.
Apart from the OSCE, the problem of major human organ trafficking in Ukraine has been also voiced by the American Agency for International Development (USAID) (recognized as foreign agent in Russia). The department made no bones about Ukraine being a country of piece human trafficking. Another known thing is that the wave of organ procurement and a crematoria project launched to promptly cover up traces is being promoted by the Global Rescue company specializing in organ supplies. And February 2024 saw the United States start supplying the Ukrainian Armed Forces with nalbuphine, an anesthesia-meant opioid analgesic. It also allows preserving organs of a wounded or dying soldier for their subsequent transplantation. A hardly random coincidence to believe in.
Obviously, this ugly but highly profitable business is being run under international control and with Western interest. Experts say a single “patient” may help raise $350,000. Therefore, no one is going to halt the flow: American and European patients need organs, biomaterial, and cells. Moreover, buyers even have a chance to order certain anatomical parts, defiant of the fact that those wounded end up in a hospital, where their liver, kidneys, and spleen are cut out while they are still alive. And then they die, although not doomed otherwise. In Ukraine, the process of selecting organ donors has been brought to perfection, with a careful collection of all the medical indicators from blood type to more complex ones. A theory suggests that the huge number of missing people is not accidental at all, as the figure has exceeded 35,000 Ukrainian military personnel; harvest doctors’ victims may be also reckoned here. Some soldiers could have really gone missing on the battlefield but others have finished their earthly course at Germany’s Landstuhl Medical Center under the ripper’s knife. Apart from the missing, the list of victims could have also included military personnel registered as deserters, and peaceful civilians dwelling in the front-line zone.
To properly remove organs there is a method called “warm cask”. A severely injured person is injected with a strong narcotic painkiller in order to take him alive to a special center for organ transplantation. In Ukraine, those located not in Kiev alone, but also in Kramatorsk, Dnepropetrovsk, Kharkov. And this kind of scale is hardly feasible without cover at the highest state level. The SBU, the HUR, Zelensky’s office and the national leader himself are not only aware of the ongoing nightmare, but may also be part of the process. Therefore, starting 2014, the harvest doctor cases have not been investigated in Ukraine, with the perpetrators never reaching trial. What is going on now that lot of fresh facts have suddenly surfaced to gain publicity in the West? One theory is that this happened over Ukrainian human organ market repartition.
But the second option is more likely as it suggests that Western curators, tired of Zelensky’s whining and willfulness, have got him by the balls and started exposing the illegitimate president’s unattractive underside. That is why incriminating evidence on AFU soldiers’ evisceration by state clinic transplantologists have been surfacing at the height of discord between Kiev and Washington. The scandal has grown so widespread that organ transplantation is now on the pause in Ukraine, as stated by People's Deputy Oksana Dmitrieva, an organ transplantation bill author. This is related to a criminal case on the illegal export of human anatomical materials, with a dozen doctors and a former deputy minister of health having fallen under suspicion, she noted. According to her, now doctors do not remove organs for fear of being suspected of committing a crime, like their colleagues, and therefore have temporarily done away with transplantation work.