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My Experience of Removing Kidneys from a Prisoner at the Site of Execution By a Chinese doctor
(Clearwisdom.net) Several years ago, after graduating from medical school
I was assigned to work at a large hospital. Initially I was required to do
rotations at various sections of the hospital. One day during my rotation in the
Urology Surgery Section, the section head asked if I had the courage to deal
with corpses at an execution site. I said yes, and he sent me and a few other
people to the execution ground. He told me not to tell anyone about what I saw. It was a gloomy and foggy early morning, and our car drove for several hours
and stopped in the middle of a wide-open field, the execution site. Martial law
had been enforced a long time ago and no unauthorized person was present. Lines
and numbers were drawn on the ground. There were about ten places marked. The
police executioners were standing at the ready. Our car stopped about 80 feet from the execution site. A while later, several
ambulances pulled up besides us, some of them military ambulances, and we waited
in a line. Our driver had been through many of these executions. He pointed at
the other waiting cars and said, "This one is from the 301 Hospital in
Beijing (a top military hospital); its license plate is covered up with a piece
of cloth, and the other one is from..." Rays of sunlight lit up the earth and it was very quiet. Suddenly, a wailing
police siren pierced the air, and criminal police officers carrying light
submachine guns arrived. Prisoners whose arms and legs were tightly tied up were
carried to the designated spots. With one command, the prisoners were executed
with a shot to the back of their heads with the Type 64 pistols. Some staff
members confirmed their deaths and photographed them; those who had not died
were shot again. After it was confirmed that the prisoner assigned to us was dead, we quickly
ran up. I saw a pool of blood and white brain splattered on the ground. The
blood did not congeal. Someone had told me that the prisoners were injected with
a liver enzyme prior to execution to prevent the blood in major organs from
coagulating. I was responsible for carrying the right leg. I pulled on the rope
that tied the prisoner's right leg. The rope was wet because the prisoner had
urinated in his pants. We said, "One, two, three!" as we threw the
body through the open trunk onto the operating table inside our specially
equipped vehicle. Two people in aseptic clothes sat on opposite sites of the
table to remove the kidneys. One of them cut and removed the clothes and another
person poured antiseptic iodine on the corpse's stomach. I didn't see the
remaining procedure. It took only about five minutes to remove both kidneys.
After the kidneys were removed, they were placed in a special fluid-filled
receptacle and placed in an icebox. Most
corpses [whose organs had been harvested] were placed in black plastic bags for
cremation. The prisoners' families would only see the ashes. A few bodies were
taken away and it was heard they would be brought back after the skin was
removed. The skin will be used in transplants for burn patients. The court
charges the hospital between 3,000 yuan and 5,000 yuan for each
corpse. As our car drove back, two patients were waiting in the operation room at the
hospital for a kidney transplant. Each patient pays about 100,000 yuan for a
kidney, in addition to the medical fee. Over the past several years I had not realized that I was part of a criminal
activity. After reading about the horrifying crimes at Sujiatun Concentration
Camp on the Minghui/Clearwisdom website I felt guilty, because I participated in
something so heinous, and yet I was numb to the reality of it. Here, I want to sincerely apologize to that prisoner and solemnly warn the
world's people: people's way of thinking has become warped under the evil
Chinese Communist Party's (CCP's) rule. I hope all people can immediately awaken
and not overlook the crimes, or even participate in them without realizing the
grave nature of what they are doing. I also hope that people outside China can
recognize the crimes that are taking place in broad daylight in China and the
heinous nature of the wicked CCP.
Posting date: 3/19/2006 |