 Now, the House of Representatives has mandated the House Committees on Human Rights, National Security and Intelligence to investigate reports of illicit trade in human organs and report back to the House in 10 weeks for further legislative action. This is sequeled to a motion sponsored by Erumandei Iquemum from Teraba State and Olajide Ola Tubosun from Oya State on the need to stop the illicit trade which has generated $600 million to $1.2 billion revenue for the perpetrators annually. Leading the debate, Xiaolu noted that about two weeks ago, authorities in China seized a cargo ship that sailed from Nigeria with 7,200 refrigerated male organs found in 36 boxes labeled as plantain on the ship that harbored at the Shanghai port called the Red Market. The lawmakers worried that the increase in cases of missing persons, ritual killings and trafficking of persons may be linked to the menace, hence the urgent need to curb the criminal act. The motion provided by an anonymous source, Chinese authorities seized a ship that sailed from Nigeria with 7,200 refrigerated male organs found in 36 boxes labeled as plantain on the ship that harbored at the Shanghai port. Concerned that harvest of organs can only be done by medical personnel with the aid of rogue public officials. Also concerned that perpetrators of this illicit trade, by the year 2009 we are generating between $600 million to $1.2 million profit annually and have been encouraged by poor security situations to use the third world as major suppliers. The House therefore resolves to mandate the committees on human rights and national security and intelligence to investigate the whole gamut of this value chain.