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First for breaking news and analysis: Compelling world news stories from NBC News journalists. Follow us on Twitter and Facebook.

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  • Updated
    15
    May
    2013
    4:57pm, EDT

    Girl's organs removed after vacation death; family believes they may have been sold

    Parents of an eight-year-old girl want an investigation after she died in a clinic in India and had her organs removed without them knowing. ITV's Mark Gough reports.

    By Alastair Jamieson, Staff writer, NBC News

    A girl who died while vacationing in India was missing her internal organs when her body was returned to Britain, according to her parents who fear she may have been the victim of the illegal trade in human body parts.

    But the hospital in India where her body was taken reportedly denied the girl's organs were harvested for sale, insisting they were removed for additional investigation as to the cause of death.

    Gurkiren Kaur, 8, died moments after a doctor treating her for dehydration in India’s Punjab region gave her an injection two weeks ago, according to her family. 

    BPM Media

    Gurkiren Kaur, 8

    A member of parliament in the girl’s home city of Birmingham, England, has demanded an international investigation into the case. Shabana Mahmood, the lawmaker, told ITV News she had raised the “deeply suspicious circumstances” of the case with British Foreign Secretary William Hague.

    The Birmingham Mail newspaper, which first reported the story, said the commercial trade of human organs remained big business in India, despite having been banned in 1994.

    A local politician, who is a friend of the family, said there were "many unanswered questions" about Gurkiren's death and suggested it was "very possible" the girl was deliberately killed for her organs.

    "It does happen in India, and since this case was first reported we have been contacted by other families who say their relatives have died and had organs removed without an explanation," Birmingham City Councillor Narinder Kooner said.

    The state-owned hospital in Punjab where the girl’s first autopsy took place denied late Wednesday that her organs had been stolen, according to Indian media reports.

    Vijay Sharda, Medical Superintendent of the Rajindra Hospital, told the Press Trust of India (PTI) that organs and tissue were sent for further examination, the English-language newspaper Deccan Herald reported.

    He told the PTI that doctors attributed her death to a congenital heart defect for which she had already undergone surgery in the UK, according to the report.

    Gurkiren was visiting India on her first overseas vacation when she became ill on April 2 with a mild case of dehydration, according to her family. After being given an injection at a clinic, her eyes rolled to the back of her head and she quickly became unresponsive, her parents said. 

    BPM Media

    Gurkiren Kaur is seen with brother Simram and parents Santokh Singh Loyal and Amrit Kaur as they set off for their holiday in India.

    Her mother, Amrit, and father, Santokh, said they agreed to allow the India hospital's doctors to perform a biopsy in order to establish a cause of death - as required by Indian law.

    When the girl's body arrived back in the U.K., a British coroner called Gurkiren's parents to say it was missing the organs needed to investigate her cause of death, the parents said. It is common practice in Britain for an autopsy to be carried out in U.K. on citizens who die overseas.

    Gurkiren's parents say the Indian clinic's doctor refused to tell them what had been in the injection.

    Her mother Amrit, who is a postal worker, told ITV News: "I said, ‘What is the injection for? She doesn't need an injection she just needs a saline drip for half an hour or 45 minutes.’ He didn't answer me at all he just gave me a blank look and totally ignored me and just inserted the needle into a syringe and as soon as he pushed it in her neck flipped backwards.

    "Her eyes rolled over and she turned a grayish-whitish color. She just blinked twice and her mouth was left open."

    The parents insist they have been unable to get information about that happened to their daughter or the whereabouts of her organs.

    Speaking earlier, Kooner said the case raised many questions.

    "Did the clinic doctor have her organs in mind when he gave her this injection?" she asked. "Or was she the victim of medical incompetence who then had the organs removed by somebody at the hospital? What has happened to these organs? We just don’t know."

    Kooner conceded that it was possible the girl had been the victim of a series of individual acts of incompetence, but added: "Gurkiren was a happy, healthy girl who was laughing and joking until this injection. We will never be able to investigate the cause of her death until these organs are found."

    Art Caplan, co-chairman of a 2009 United Nations task force on organ trafficking, said that the evidence in Gurkiren’s case doesn’t point to organ theft.

    “I’m skeptical,” said Caplan, director of the division of medical ethics at NYU Langone Medical Center. “Whenever I see somebody say that somebody killed somebody for parts, I’m skeptical.”

    The World Health Organization estimates that more than 106,000 organs were transplanted globally in 2010. That included about 10,000 kidneys that were illegally obtained, the agency said.

    Organ transplant is actually a complex effort that involves precise coordination to be successful. Blood and tissue types of both donor and recipient must match, the size of the organs must be compatible and the organs must be preserved after death, Caplan notes. In this child’s case, the timeline doesn’t suggest that any of that would have happened.

    “Was she on life support?” he said. “Do you have container to put the organs in? This girl is missing internal organs, but it doesn’t add up to that.”

    In a statement, Britain’s Foreign Office said: "We can confirm the death of a British national in Punjab, India, on April 2. We are providing consular assistance in the case and cannot comment further."

    A member of the Punjab Congress demanded an investigation into the case, according to the Hindustan Times.

    "The death of Gurkiren Kaur… brings to the fore the crumbled and medieval-type healthcare system in Punjab," state Congress spokesman Sukhpal Singh Khaira told the newspaper, adding that the girl has been “subjected to inhuman autopsy at a government hospital."

    In addition to the black market for organs, there is a legitimate global trade in human tissue taken from bodies - supposedly with the prior consent of the deceased.

    A recent investigation found that, in the United States, an estimated two million products derived from human tissue are sold each year, a figure that has doubled over the past decade.

    Mark Gough, reporter with NBC News' partner ITV News, contributed to this report.

    Related: Body wranglers at work: Inside the global trade in human corpses

     

    This story was originally published on Wed May 15, 2013 11:05 AM EDT

    641 comments

    I wouldn't go to india if you paid me a million bucks.

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  • 19
    Feb
    2013
    7:09am, EST

    Victim of mysterious SARS-like virus dies in British hospital

    Health Protection Agency via AP

    A British Health Protection Agency photo shows an electron microscope image of a coronavirus, part of a family of viruses that cause ailments including the common cold and SARS. This one was first identified last year in the Middle East. A patient in Britain has died after being treated for the virus. So far 12 people have been diagnosed and six have perished.

    By The Associated Press

    LONDON -- A patient being treated for a mysterious SARS-like virus has died, a British hospital said Tuesday.

    Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham, central England, said the coronavirus victim was also being treated for "a long-term, complex unrelated health problem" and already had a compromised immune system.

    A total of 12 people worldwide have been diagnosed with the disease, six of whom have died.

    The virus was first identified last year in the Middle East. Most of those infected had traveled to Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Jordan or Pakistan, but the person who just died is believed to have caught it from a relative in Britain, where there have been four confirmed cases.

    The new coronavirus is part of a family of viruses that cause ailments including the common cold and SARS. In 2003, a global outbreak of SARS killed about 800 people worldwide.

    Health experts still aren't sure exactly how humans are being infected. The new coronavirus is most closely related to a bat virus and scientists are considering whether bats or other animals like goats or camels are a possible source of infection.

    Britain's Health Protection Agency has said while it appears the virus can spread from person to person, "the risk of infection in contacts in most circumstances is still considered to be low."

    Officials at the World Health Organization said the new virus has probably already spread between humans in some instances. In Saudi Arabia last year, four members of the same family fell ill and two died. And in a cluster of about a dozen people in Jordan, the virus may have spread at a hospital's intensive care unit.

    Related: 

    New virus passed person-to-person in Britain, officials say

    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    87 comments

    Expect to see more of this kind of thing in the USA as troops come back from contaminated sh*tholes like Afghanistan.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: mideast, britain, death, disease, england, virus, uk, featured, birmingham, sars, coronavirus, medical-mystery
  • 4
    Jan
    2013
    8:15am, EST

    'Strong young woman': Taliban shooting victim Malala Yousufzai leaves UK hospital

    Three months after being shot in the head by the Taliban, Pakistani teenager Malala Yousafzai is still on the road to recovery and as committed as ever to education advocacy. NBC's Keir Simmons reports.

    By F. Brinley Bruton, NBC News

    LONDON — Malala Yousufzai, the Pakistani girl shot in the head by the Taliban for advocating girls' education, has been discharged from a hospital in the U.K. after doctors said she was well enough to spend some time recovering with her family.

    The 15-year-old was shot at point-blank range in October after becoming a symbol of resistance to the insurgents' efforts to deny women education and other rights. The attack on Malala, which also wounded two of her classmates, prompted revulsion and condemnation, and helped galvanize supporters of women's education worldwide.


    In a statement, the hospital treating her said she had been discharged on Thursday because she was healthy enough to be treated as an outpatient.

    'Malala Day' marked in Pakistan, amid security fears

    "Malala is a strong young woman and has worked hard with the people caring for her to make excellent progress in her recovery," Dave Rosser, medical director of the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham where Malala was treated, said in a statement. "Following discussions with Malala and her medical team, we decided that she would benefit from being at home with her parents and two brothers." 

    Slideshow:

    U.K. National Health Service

    Malala Yousufzai was discharged from the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham, England, on Thursday.

    Launch slideshow

    Malala will be readmitted in late January or early February to undergo cranial reconstructive surgery as part of her long-term recovery, the hospital said. In the meantime, she will visit the hospital regularly to attend clinical appointments, the statement added. 

    More on this story from NBC's UK partner ITV News

    Doctors said that although the bullet hit her left brow, it did not penetrate her skull but instead traveled underneath the skin along the side of her head and into her neck. The decision to send Malala to Britain was taken in consultation with her family; Pakistan is paying for her treatment.

    Citing patient confidentiality, hospital authorities declined to say what her plans were to continue her education, though they acknowledge she is able to read in both English and Urdu.

    The Pakistani teenager shot in the head by the Taliban for promoting girls' education has been released from hospital. Yousufzai will be treated as an outpatient at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham. ITN's Rupert Evelyn reports.

    Malala was flown to the U.K. on Oct. 15, six days after the school bus shooting. She was treated by doctors specializing in neurosurgery, trauma and other disciplines in a department of the hospital which has treated hundreds of soldiers wounded in conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq.

    'Spy of the West': Al-Qaida, Taliban struggle to justify attack on Pakistani teen

    The wave of condemnation that followed the attack prompted the Taliban to release statements justifying their action. Malala quickly became an international cause celebre and became a contender to become Time's Person of the Year 2012. 

    More than 250,000 people have also signed online petitions calling for her to be nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize for her activism.

    Yousufzai's father said in October he was sure she would "rise again" to pursue her dreams after medical treatment.

    This month Pakistan appointed Malala's father, Ziauddin, as its education attache in Birmingham. The position, with an initial three-year commitment, virtually guarantees that Malala will remain in Britain for now.

    In Paris, the courageous Pakistani ten Malala Yousafzai was honored at an event marking the U.N.'s Human Rights Day. NBC's Amna Nawaz reports.

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • ANALYSIS: Is peace really in the air in Afghanistan?
    • Commemoration or deification? Pakistan embraces 'political goddess' Bhutto
    • Drug-resistant malaria threatens deadly global 'nightmare'
    • From alcohol to kites: An A to Z guide to the Islamic Republic of 'Banistan'
    • UK police: Attackers dressed as Oompa Loompas beat man
    • Vatican launches swipe-card security system
    • US sailors sue Japan's TEPCO for post-quake radiation exposure

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    262 comments

    The Taliban's greatest "Martyr". She reprents the good future and intelligence of her people where the Taliban animals showed their age old ignorant hate. Long live Malala and wishing you the brightest future.

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  • 26
    Oct
    2012
    9:16am, EDT

    Father of girl shot by Taliban: 'Angels' will help as she recovers

    The Pakistani teenager who is recovering after having been shot by the Taliban for speaking out about women's right to an education, is now expected to make a full recovery. NBC's Amna Nawaz reports.

    By Peter Jeary, NBC News

    LONDON -- The father of the 15-year-old Pakistani girl shot by the Taliban for speaking out for the right to an education described his daughter’s attacker on Friday as “an agent of Satan” but said he felt “angels” were on his side as she recovered from her injuries.

    Speaking at Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham, England, where the family had been reunited with Malala Yousufzai “amid tears of happiness” the evening before, Ziauddin Yousufzai said the Oct. 9 attack marked a turning point for Pakistan.

    “Everyone, from all political parties, all creeds, all Pakistan was praying for my daughter,” Ziauddin Yousufzai said.


    In expressing gratitude for the worldwide tributes and messages of support that have flooded in for Malala, her father described her as “the daughter of everybody, the sister of everybody.”

    He said the family had decided to travel to the United Kingdom because otherwise Malala “would be missing her mother and two younger brothers and would not recover as quickly.”

    Specialized treatment
    Malala was airlifted to Britain for specialist treatment on Oct. 15. Doctors said the gunman’s bullet had struck the teenager just above her left eye and had grazed the edge of her brain.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Ziauddin Yousufzai paid tribute to all the medical teams involved in caring for his daughter. He said she had always received “the right treatment, at the right place and at the right time.”

    Dr. Dave Rosser, Medical Director at University Hospitals Birmingham, said Malala was making very good clinical progress. He told reporters an infection had cleared and her treatment was concentrated on physical and psychological rehabilitation.

    “She’s very tired,“ Rosser said. “But she managed a big smile for her mom, dad and brothers.”

    University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust

    Malala Yousufzai, center, meets with her father Ziauddin Yousufzai and other members of her family at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham, England, on Friday.

    'She will rise again'
    Ziauddin Yousufzai  explained how Malala had been caught up in his social activism in Pakistan, becoming both his “educational companion and friend.”

    Complete World coverage on NBCNews.com

    “We have a saying, ‘As the father, so the daughter’,” he said. “And so, in that environment, she became a children’s rights activists at a very early age.”

    Malala began standing up to the Taliban when she was 11, when the Islamabad government had effectively ceded control of the Swat Valley, where she lives, to the militants.

    Malala Yousufzai remains in stable condition at Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham where she is receiving gifts, flowers and positive messages from around the world. Her family is expected to arrive Britain in the next few days. NBC's Amna Nawaz reports.

    The attack on Malala and two other girls as they left school was the culmination of years of campaigning that had pitted her against one of Pakistan's most ruthless Taliban commanders, Maulana Fazlullah.

    "They wanted to kill her. But she fell temporarily. She will rise again. She will stand again," Malala's father told reporters.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Syrian military agrees to Eid cease-fire; residents report shelling
    • Olympic medals 'stolen' as athletes party at nightclub
    • Outrage after video shows Chinese teacher abusing kindergarteners
    • 'The new Afghanistan'? West turns its attention to Mali
    • BBC ripped for handling of sex abuse scandal tied to former host
    • Hate crimes rise, far right strengthens as Greece economy sinks
    • Top 10 foreign policy issues facing a new president
    • How a viral death rumor pushed Fidel Castro out of retirement

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    102 comments

    Angels won't help. But the doctors will.

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    Explore related topics: britain, pakistan, taliban, featured, birmingham, swat-valley, malala
  • 25
    Oct
    2012
    9:52am, EDT

    Pakistani girl shot by Taliban reunited with family

    Nathalie Bardou / AP

    Participants of a vigil for Malala Yousufzai hold a poster of the shooting victim on Oct. 11 in Islamabad, Pakistan.

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    Updated at 5:30 p.m. ET: The family of Malala Yousufzai, the 15-year-old Pakistani girl shot by the Taliban for speaking out for the right to an education, arrived at a hospital in Britain Thursday to be reunited with her, NBC News has learned.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Meanwhile, Pakistan's interior minister Rehman Malik announced that Yousufzai was able to speak and had talked to her parents by telephone, The Associated Press reported. 

    On Oct. 15, Yousufzai was transferred to a hospital in the English city of Birmingham to receive specialized treatment for the injuries she suffered earlier in the month.


    Her father, mother and two younger brothers were making the trip to Britain, Pakistani and British sources told NBC News.

    Pakistan's High Commissioner to the United Kingdom, Wajid Shamsul Hasan, accompanied them.

    In Pakistan's largest city, 'Old Glory' is flammable and profitable

    In a statement recorded for Pakistani state television, her father, Ziauddin Yousufzai, said his daughter would return home after her medical treatment, the AP reported.  It was the first time he had spoken publicly since the Oct. 9 shooting in northwest Pakistan.

    The teenage girl from Pakistan, Malala Yousafzai, who was injured by the Taliban in an attack, continues her recovery in a British hospital. NBC's Amna Nawaz has the latest.

    In the statement, Ziauddin Yousufzai dismissed rumors that his family would seek asylum overseas in light of continuing threats by the Taliban.

    "I have seen doomsday and survived, you might say. Malala has been honored by the nation, by the world, by people of all classes of all creeds of all colors. I am grateful for that," Britain's Daily Telegraph quoted Ziauddin Yousufzai as saying in an interview before he left Pakistan. 

    Can social media propel 'rock star' politician Imran Khan to power in Pakistan?

    A spokeswoman for the University Hospitals Birmingham said Yousufzai was still comfortable and responding well to treatment at the city’s Queen Elizabeth Hospital.

    Tributes and words of support from around the world continue to pour in to a special message board on the hospital’s website.

     

    Malala Yousufzai remains in stable condition at Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham where she is receiving gifts, flowers and positive messages from around the world. Her family is expected to arrive in the UK in the next few days. NBC's Amna Nawaz reports.

    Yousufzai began standing up to the Taliban when she was 11, when the Islamabad government had effectively ceded control of the Swat Valley, where she lives, to the militants.

    Pakistan's Generation Y battles to shape country's future

    The attack on Yousufzai and two other girls as they left school was the culmination of years of campaigning that had pitted her against one of Pakistan's most ruthless Taliban commanders, Maulana Fazlullah.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • 'The new Afghanistan'? West turns its attention to Mali
    • BBC ripped for handling of sex abuse scandal tied to former host
    • Hate crimes rise, far right strengthens as Greece economy sinks
    • Top 10 foreign policy issues facing a new president
    • How a viral death rumor pushed Fidel Castro out of retirement

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    255 comments

    This family should get out of Pakistan when they are reunited. They will never be safe. It would be an even bigger tragedy for this to happen all over again, or worse even, to this poor defenseless little girl and her family. Heads up ALL.

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    Explore related topics: pakistan, taliban, featured, birmingham, malala, commentid-pakistan
  • 19
    Oct
    2012
    6:45am, EDT

    Doctors: Girl shot by Taliban able to stand, communicate

    The young Pakistani girl who was shot by the Taliban for speaking out about their oppressive rule is now communicating freely and writing – still weak, but making good progress in her recovery. NBC's Keir Simmons reports.

    By NBC News staff and wire services

    Updated at 10:45 a.m. ET: Malala Yousufzai, the Pakistani schoolgirl shot in the head by the Taliban, is able to stand with help and communicate, British doctors treating her severe wounds said on Friday, though she still shows signs of infection.

    Yousufzai, who was shot by the Pakistani Taliban for advocating education for girls, on Monday was flown from Pakistan to receive treatment at a unit at Birmingham's Queen Elizabeth Hospital that has expertise in dealing with complex trauma cases. The unit has treated hundreds of soldiers wounded in Afghanistan.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    The hospital also said that Yousufzai was 15 years old, not 14, as had been widely reported.  

    Dr. Dave Rosser, medical director at the hospital, said that the girl was "well enough that she's agreed that she's happy, in fact keen, for us to share more clinical detail."   

    Al-Qaida, Taliban struggle to justify attack on Malala

    Rosser said the infection was probably related to the track of a bullet which grazed her head when she was attacked. Because of the infection, Rosser said, "she is not out of the woods yet."

    Slideshow: Schoolgirl attacked by Taliban in Pakistan

    Fifteen-year-old Malala Yousufzai was shot by the Taliban for speaking out against Pakistani militants and promoting education for girls.

    Launch slideshow

    Yousufzai began standing up to the Taliban when she was 11, when the Islamabad government had effectively ceded control of the Swat Valley, where she lives, to the militants.

    Thousands rally in Karachi for Malala, 14-year-old Pakistani girl shot by Taliban

    The attack on Yousufzai and two other girls as they left school was the culmination of years of campaigning that had pitted the her against one of Pakistan's most ruthless Taliban commanders, Maulana Fazlullah.

    The hospital also released more details of the attack on Yousufzai.  She was shot at point blank range and the bullet hit her left brow, but instead of penetrating the skull it traveled underneath the skin along the length of the side of her head and into her neck, landing above her left shoulder-blade. 

    While Yousufzai was able to communicate by writing, should could not talk because of a breathing tube in her throat.  She was, however, aware of her surroundings, the hospital said in a statement.

    Schoolgirl Malala Yousafzai, who survived an assassination attempt by the Taliban, has been airlifted out of Pakistan and flown to England for treatment of her head and neck injuries. NBC's Keir Simmons reports.

    Despite the dramatic development, Rosser emphasized that she was still recovering from a very grave injury.

    "But we are hopeful we will make a good recovery," he added in a statement.

    NBC News staff and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Self-professed Sept. 11 mastermind Mohammed airs his views at Gitmo hearing
    • British government to recruit teens as next generation of spies
    • U.S. nonprofit 'names and shames' businesses to put bite into Iran sanctions
    • Van full of bodies stolen during drivers' break in Germany
    • Revolt of the underclass in Syria
    • Fidel Castro statement read at Havana event amid rumors about his health
    • Rights group blasts Rwanda winning seat on UN Security Council
    • 'Spy of the West': Al-Qaida, Taliban struggle to justify attack on Pakistani teen
    • UK computer hacker wins 10 year fight against extradition to US

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook


    301 comments

    Hurray for Malala.

    Show more
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