New Witness: There Are Dozens of Similar Concentration Camps
(clearwisdom.net) The Hospital in Sujiatun is Only One of 36 Similar Concentration Camps in China According to this witness from the military system, the hospital in Sujiatun District is only one of 36 similar concentration camps across China. At present, the majority of detained Falun Gong practitioners are in prisons, forced labor camps and detention centers. They are transferred elsewhere on a large scale only when needed. This witness said that Heilongjiang, Jilin and Liaoning provinces imprison the largest number of Falun Gong practitioners. The concentration camp in Jiutai Area, Jilin Province is the 5th largest camp imprisoning Falun Gong practitioners in China. This camp alone detains over 14,000 Falun Gong practitioners. Jilin Concentration Camp, Code Named 672-S, Imprisons over 120,000 People The veteran military doctor indicated, "From the information I have access to, the largest concentration camp is in Jilin Province. The concentration camp code named 672-S imprisons over 120,000 people. A large number of Falun Gong practitioners, felons and prisoners of conscience from all over China are there, but I do not know its address." There Were Indeed over 10,000 People Detained in the Underground Concentration Camp of the Sujiatun District Hospital Prior to 2005 and in Early 2005 The witness said, "In the underground concentration camp of the Sujiatun District Hospital, there were indeed over 10,000 people kept there in early 2005, but at the present time, the number of detainees there is maintained at 600-750. Many detainees have been transferred to other concentration camps." It Takes Only One Day to Transfer 5,000 People He continued, "You can't find much evidence even if you enter Sujiatun District to investigate. It takes only one day to transfer 5,000 people in a closed freight train on a special route. I have witnessed a specially dispatched freight train transferring over 7,000 people in one trip from Tianjin to the
After the Sujiatun atrocities were exposed, WOIPFG launched an urgent investigation across China. Results show that the crimes of harvesting Falun Gong practitioners' organs have happened and are still happening in at least in Beijing, Tianjin, Shanghai, Hunan, Shandong, Liaoning, and Guangdong. The excerpts of several investigative telephone conversations are as below. (An Undisclosed Medical College in Tianjin) (An Undisclosed Hospital in Shandong Province) The Chinese Communist Party's Top Level Leadership Agreed to Deal With Class Enemies With Any Means According to witness, the Chinese Communist Party has openly declared Falun Gong to be "class enemies", turning Falun Gong practitioners into the target of its most severe suppression. The witness said that according to the latest decisions, the Chinese Communist Party's Central Committee agreed to treat Falun Gong practitioners as "class enemies" and to handle them in any economically beneficial manner without having to report to higher authorities. In other words, Falun Gong practitioners, like many felons in China, are no longer regarded as human beings, but as raw materials for commercial products. They have become commodities. According to the witness from the military system, according to "the country's regulations," the provincial government has the authority to establish "recycling organizations" to process felons under the supervision of the military region in the province. This practice was established by a legal document that the Chinese Communist Party's Central Military Committee established as early as 1962. This practice continues to this day. According the regulations in the document, death penalty prisoners and felons convicted of serious crimes may be processed according to the development needs of the state or of socialism. During the Great Cultural Revolution (1966-1976), the most extreme way to process these prisoners was to use their bodies for food. The second was to use them as slave labor for construction or line production work. Chinese version available at http://minghui.ca/mh/articles/2006/3/31/124096.html |