China faces suspicions about organ
harvesting
By Gregory
M. Lamb | Staff writer of The Christian
Science Monitor
August 03, 2006 edition
A pair of human rights activists are charging that
"a crime against humanity" is happening on a large scale in
China. Members of Falun
Gong, a spiritual movement banned by the Chinese government since 1999, are
being "in effect, murdered for their organs," which are being sold
to buyers from
China and abroad, says David
Kilgour, a former member of the Canadian Parliament and coauthor of the
report.
Mr. Kilgour and his
partner, Canadian human rights lawyer David Matas, are now traveling the
world speaking with governments and professional and human rights organizations
urging further investigation of the allegations. Early last month, the pair
released a report ( http://investigation.go.saveinter.net/) laying out
details of an investigation they undertook on behalf of a Falun Gong support
group, the Coalition to Investigate the Persecution of the Falun Gong in
China.
"Ideally, we
would like to pursue further research before we come to any firm
conclusions," the two conceded, while noting the difficulty in obtaining
accurate information within the closed society of the People's Republic of
China.
But while the
evidence may not persuade everyone who reads their report, it is strong
enough in their minds to render a verdict. "Based on what we now know,
we have come to the regrettable conclusion that the allegations are
true," the report says. "We believe that there has been and
continues today to be large-scale organ seizures from unwilling Falun Gong
practitioners."
The source of some
41,500 organ transplants in
China in the years 2000
through 2005 remains unexplained, leading to the possibility that they may be
the result of the execution of Falun Gong members, the report says.
ng prisoners of conscience," the
report alleges. Their vital organs were seized involuntarily "for sale at high
prices, sometimes to foreigners, who normally face long waits for voluntary
donations of such organs in their home countries."
The Falun Gong
movement, whose guiding principles are truthfulness, compassion, and
forbearance, was founded in
China in 1992 by Li Hongzhi, who now lives in the
United States. Its philosophies
incorporate ideas from Buddhism and Taoism and include slow-motion meditative
exercises. Falun Gong is generally seen as a peaceful and law-abiding
movement outside
China, but within its
borders it is officially deemed a dangerous cult. For several years, Falun
Gong followers around the world have been actively protesting the treatment
of the movement's adherents inside
China.
The Chinese Embassy
in
Canada issued a reply to
the Kilgour-Matas report July 6, the same day the report was released.
China abides by World
Health Organization principles that prohibit the sale of human organs and
require written voluntary consent from donors, the statement said. "It
is obvious that their purpose is to smear
China's image," the
statement continues. "[T]he so-called 'independent investigation report'
made by a few Canadians based on rumors and false allegations is groundless
and biased."
In a phone call, a
spokesman for the Chinese Embassy in Washington, Li Jianhua,
also called the allegations "totally fake" and said the Chinese
government had already investigated the claims and found them meritless.
But by immediately
dismissing their report "out of hand," Kilgour and Mr. Matas said
in a reply, the Chinese government has admitted that it has conducted
"no investigations to determine whether or not what the report contains
is true."
Whether the organ
harvesting - taking corneas, livers, hearts, and kidneys for transplantation
- is being done as part of the official crackdown on Falun Gong or simply as
the result of local corruption in prisons and hospitals around China is not
clear, Matas says, and may be a result of both motives.
China has a history of
harvesting organs from executed prisoners, he says. The number of Falun Gong
prisoners in
China remains a mystery
outside
China. The Falun Gong
"are completely defenseless in prison: unidentified, no
protectors," Matas says. "They become an easy victim for this form
of greed."
The Kilgour-Matas
report "makes a very convincing case," says Kirk Allison, associate
director of the Program in Human Rights and Medicine at the
University of
Minnesota. He says academic
journals and conferences now should take an ethical stand to reject papers
and presentations from authors who rely on data derived from transplantations
performed in
China.
"Given the evidence
at hand, international transplant patients who obtain organs in
China do so at the cost
of benefiting from, and tacitly supporting, the continuance of an ongoing
lethal violation of human dignity and human rights," Dr. Allison said in
a published statement circulated at the World Transplantation Congress in
Boston last week.
"Prospective patients should be informed of this fact and actively
discouraged from pursing this avenue of treatment."
Kilgour took on the
Falun Gong project last spring after retiring from the Canadian Parliament,
where he had been elected as a member since 1979. Neither he nor Matas are
Falun Gong practitioners.
In March, the
Chinese government announced that a new law, to take effect July 1, would ban
sales of human organs and require that donors give written permission for
their organs to be transplanted. But, according to Kilgour, the fact that a
new law was passed "highlights the fact that there is no such
legislation in place now."
Kilgour and Matas
plan to update and reissue their report in September.
Phone transcripts:
Shopping for Falun Gong organs
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As part of their report alleging that China was executing Falun Gong
prisoners and harvesting their organs for transplantation, Canadian lawyers
and human rights activists David Kilgour and David Matas included
transcripts of telephone calls made by Mandarin Chinese speakers from North America to hospitals and other
institutions in China. The callers inquired about the
availability of organs from Falun Gong prisoners. The caller below is
identified only as "M" to protect his or her identity. Excerpts
from English translations of some of the transcripts follow:
From
a call to "Li" at the Mijiang City Detention Center in
Heilongjiang Province (June
8, 2006):
M:
Do you have Falun Gong [organ] suppliers? ...
Li:
We used to have, yes.
M:
What about now?
Li:
... Yes.
...
M:
Can we come to select, or you provide directly to us?
Li:
We provide them to you.
M:
What about the price?
Li:
We discuss after you come.
...
From
a call to Shanghai's
Zhongshan Hospital Organ Transplant Clinic (March 16, 2006):
M:
... So how long do I have to wait [for organ transplant surgery]?
Doctor:
About a week after you come....
M:
Is there the kind of organs that come from Falun Gong? I heard that they
are very good.
Doctor:
All of ours are those types.
From
a call to "Dr. Lu" at Nanning City Minzu Hospital in Guangxi Autonomous Region (May 22, 2006):
M:
Could you find organs from Falun Gong practitioners?
Dr.
Lu: Let me tell you, we have no way to get [them]. It's rather difficult to
get it now in Guangxi. If you cannot wait, I suggest you go to
Guangzhou because it's very easy for them
to get the organs....
M:
Then they use organs from Falun Gong practitioners?
Lu:
Correct....
M:
... What you used before [organs from Falun Gong practitioners], were they
from detention center[s] or prison[s]?
Lu:
From prisons.
M:
... And it was from healthy Falun Gong practitioners...?
Lu:
Correct. We would choose the good ones because we assure the quality in our
operation.
From
a call to "Dr. Dai" at Shanghai Jiaotong University Hospital's
Liver Transplant Center (March
16, 2006):
M:
I want to know how long [the patients] have to wait [for a liver
transplant].
Dr.
Dai: The supply of organs we have, we have every day. We do them every day.
M:
We want fresh, alive ones.
Dr.
Dai: They are all alive, all alive....
...
M:
I heard some come from those who practice Falun Gong, those who are very
healthy.
Dr.
Dai: Yes, we have. I can't talk clearly to you over the phone.
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