David Matas and I have assembled more than fifty pieces of evidence over the
past two years, which indicate that our conclusions about ongoing
organ-pillaging across China are valid.
We found to our deep and
continuing concern that since 2001 the party-state of China and its agencies
have killed thousands of Falun Gong practitioners, without any form of prior
trial, and then sold their vital organs for large sums of money, often to "organ
tourists" from wealthy nations. We amassed a substantial body of evidence and
became convinced beyond any doubt that this crime against humanity has occurred
and is still happening (Our report, media reports and updates can be accessed in
19 languages at www.organharvestinvestigation.net).
These macabre deaths would not be occurring if the Chinese people
enjoyed the rule-of-law and if their government believed in the intrinsic
importance of each one of them. In my judgement, it is the lethal combination of
totalitarian governance and "anything is permitted" economics that allows this
and other inhuman practices to persist in China.
The Chinese Medical
Association agreed with the World Medical Association quite recently that "organ
tourists" will not be able to obtain further organ transplants in China. Whether
this promise was anything more than public relations cant intended to benefit
the Beijing Olympiad remains to be seen. It does seem clear that this new
position by the CMA is an admission that our general conclusion—and that of
other studies-- is irrefutable.
The independent media across the world have revealed over the years that numerous seriously contaminated products from China’s ‘anything goes’ economy have been sold at home and abroad. Here is the essence of a Reuters’ news story dated Sept. 18, 2008 and datelined Beijing:
Who in Canada or anywhere will knowingly put in their mouths products ‘made
in China’ until quality control there is dealt with effectively by effective
regulation of manufacturers? Canada and all other food/drug importers from China
will have to do much more rigorous inspections of its products in future. Zero
tolerance of toxic or other unacceptable ingredients in products coming from any
country should be the new import practice of governments everywhere.
When you have no rules in an exporting country, slippery slopes can
appear anywhere as in the case of China. In my view, pillaging organs from
deemed “enemies of the Party” for cash from foreign patients is a whole new
order of slope. The use of poisons in export products illustrates well the
values of China’s party-state. If they could do that, it is not hard to believe
that they use human bodies as bio mass for organ harvesting.
Faking the
voice of the little girl who sang at the Games opening, and probably the
passport of the gymnasts, also indicates how easily the party-state could
falsify the identities of people used for organ harvesting. So-called 'consent'
documents that organs are freely donated count for nothing. Some say organ
pillaging in China is now in decline. Many insiders say it will resume now that
the Olympics are over.
At a forum at the U of Toronto Medical faculty in May, 2007 important points
were made about organ pillaging in China. Gerry Koffman, the Canadian
co-ordinator for Doctors Against Forced Organ Harvesting (DAFOH), a group of
medical doctors warning medical communities internationally about the serious
implications of receiving organ transplants in China, spoke about the practice
as a “holocaust”.
Dr. Koffman stressed that DAFOH is a supporter of
organ transplants and that it is important for people to understand the
difference between organ transplants from consenting donors and those seized
from unwilling prisoners of conscience, who are systematically killed by medical
personnel across China for their organs.
Based on accounts from former
prisoners, Falun Gong practitioners are being singled out for systematic
blood-testing and medical examination in detention centres, said Dr. Torsten
Trey, the founder and head of DAFOH. “It makes no sense that a group who is
persecuted and tortured would be tested for their health…The killings in Nazi
Germany shows that nothing is impossible when a totalitarian system loses all
ethics," said the German-born and trained Trey.
Ying Dai, a Falun Gong
practitioner who survived Chinese labour camps and now lives in Norway after
being granted refugee status by the UN, confirmed to the forum the periodic
blood testing of Falun Gong practitioners in the camps. She also told of other
inhuman treatment. "For five years after being arrested, I was incarcerated. We
were severely beaten. But we were not animals and we committed no crime…The
degree of persecution is beyond what people in the West can imagine".
Erping Zhang, frequently a spokesperson for Falun Gong in New York,
offered an overview of Falun Gong as a physical exercise and spiritual practice
and of its persecution by the party-state in China. First made public in China
in 1992, Falun Gong was originally endorsed by the party-state for its ability
to improve health, but it fell out of favour once the Party discovered that by
1999 it had attracted more adherents—between 70-100 million-- than there were
Party members.
Zhang emphasized that Falun Gong practitioners have been
demonized continuously since 1999 by the entirety of the Chinese media. The
media treat Falun Gong worse than criminals, Zhang said, and this has
unfortunately helped to justify the persecution. As a friend who is an expert on
Soviet Russia pointed out, even during Stalin’s bloodiest Terror period in the
1930s, many Russians approved him as a kindly “Uncle Joe” figure because of
party control of all media across the Soviet Union.
“All countries should take steps to govern organ donation and
transplantation, thereby ensuring patient safety and prohibiting unethical
practices, according to an article appearing in the September 2008 issue of the
Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology. The document is a
consensus of more than 150 representatives of scientific and medical bodies from
around the world, government officials, social scientists, and ethicists, who
met in Istanbul, Turkey, this spring.
“Unethical practices related to
transplantation include organ trafficking (the illicit sale of human organs),
transplant commercialism (when an organ is treated as a commodity), and
transplant tourism (when organs given to patients from outside a country
undermine the country's ability to provide organs for its own population). The
Declaration of Istanbul states that because unethical practices are an
undesirable consequence of the global shortage of organs for transplantation,
each country should implement programs to prevent organ failure and should
provide organs to meet the transplant needs of its residents from donors within
its own population. The therapeutic potential of deceased organ donation should
also be maximized.
“In an introduction to the Declaration, Dr. Francis
Delmonico, professor of surgery at Harvard Medical School, emeritus professor of
renal transplantation at the Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, and the
Director of Medical Affairs at The Transplantation Society (TTS), noted that
with the increasing use of the Internet and the willingness of patients in rich
countries to travel and purchase organs, organ trafficking and transplant
tourism have become global problems. Through these practices, which target
vulnerable populations in resource-poor countries, "the poor who sell their
organs are being exploited, whether by richer people within their own countries
or by transplant tourists from abroad," he wrote. Dr. Delmonico added that
transplant tourists also risk physical harm by unregulated and illegal
transplantation.
“Participants in the Istanbul Summit urge transplant
professionals to put an end to these activities and to foster safe and ethical
practices for both transplant recipients and donors. The Declaration outlines a
number of steps that can help increase deceased organ donation and ensure the
protection and safety of living donors. It will be submitted to professional
organizations and to the health authorities of all countries for consideration.
"The legacy of transplantation must not be the impoverished victims of organ
trafficking and transplant tourism but rather a celebration of the gift of
health by one individual to another," the Declaration states.”
A news article by Annabel Stafford in the Melbourne Age (Aug, 28, 2008) noted
that at a meeting of transplant doctors in Sydney, Jeremy Chapman, the
Australian president of the International Transplantation Society, promised that
his members would alert Chinese authorities when a non-Chinese person travelled
to China to buy an organ and would ask the authorities to explain. Last year,
the piece notes, China banned the trade in human organs and ruled that consent
must be obtained from an organ donor after facing widespread condemnation over
the use of executed prisoners' organs for transplant. Before those changes,
there was "no doubt" Australian patients had been buying organs taken from
executed prisoners, Chapman said.
China's "determination to improve its
connections with the world" had coincided with its moves to improve human
rights, particularly when it came to the use of prisoners' organs, Chapman said.
"We need”. he added, “ to continue to assist the Chinese transplantation program
to enter the mainstream of transplantation globally through the use of brain
dead and living donors.”
"Certainly (China) has taken significant steps
to make changes and we're optimistic the change process will be strong and will
reduce the use of executed prisoners for transplants, which we are against under
any circumstances. Chapman: "The open question remains: what will China be like
post-Olympics?"
My conclusion, of course, is that all health professions across Canada and the world should join the push to end China’s human organ commerce from unwilling donors permanently.