|
Finding Evidence of the Organ-Harvesting in Sujiatun Concentration Camp from the Angle of Looking at the Sources of Organ Transplants in China
(Clearwisdom.net) Recently, the overseas media has reported on the
harvesting of organs from living Falun Gong practitioners in the secret Sujiatun
Concentration Camp. Due to the CCP's information blockade, additional evidence
is needed for further confirmation. If we simply study the sources of organ
transplants that occur in China, we can find some strong indication of the
validity of the reports. In March 2005, the Deputy Minister of the Ministry of Health, Huang Jiefu,
admitted for the first time in history that most organs in organ transplant
surgeries in China come from death penalty prisoners. So, how many death row
prisoners were executed in China every year prior to or since then? According to reports by Amnesty International, from 1990 to 1999 there were
18,194 prisoners sentenced to the death penalty in China, i.e., an average of
1,819 cases every year. In 2001 this number increased to 2,468. Amnesty
International reported in its 2004 report that there were at least 3,797
executions in 25 countries, and that, among these executions, 3,400 happened in
China. Amnesty International said that 5,000 or more prisoners are executed
every year in China. According to a report dated April 18, 2000 from Voice of America, a
scholar from the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, Liu Renwen, estimated
(based on reports from the courts and judges) that there are about 8,000
prisoners executed in China every year. In March 2004, the newspaper China
Youth Daily reported that when representatives from the National People's
Congress claimed that there have been more than 10,000 executions every year in
China while they urged the Supreme Court to re-check all the death sentence
cases. If we estimate based on the largest reported number of 10,000, then how
many organs can those death-row prisoners provide? On October 9, 1984 the Supreme Court, the Supreme People's Procuratorate, the
Ministry of Justice, the Ministry of Civil Affairs, the Ministry of Health and
the Ministry of Public Security jointly produced a legal document titled
"Temporary Rules for Using Executed Prisoners' Corpses and Organs."
According to this document, the corpses and/or organs can be used in the
following cases: 1) No one is willing to claim the body and bury it; or the
family members refuse to take and bury it; 2) The prisoner willingly donates it
to the hospital or research institute; and 3) The family agrees to the use of
the corpse. Due to the traditional ethics and notions that "one's body is
given by the parents, so one should keep it intact" and that "one
should keep the body whole even after death," very few Chinese are willing
to donate their corpse. According to sources, less than 5% of the prisoners'
families are willing to donate the corpse and no more than 5% of the corpses are
left unclaimed. Based on this data, one can estimate that only about 1,000
corpses per year, at most, can be used as organ transplant sources in China. Then how many organ transplants occur in China every year? According to
incomplete statistics from the China Organ Transplant Research Association,
there have been 55,000 organ transplants in China up until 2003. Of the 55,000
transplants, about 50,000 cases have been kidney transplants. The number of
current kidney transplants is reported at more than 5,000 per year in China. In
2001 there were 5,561 kidney transplants done in 106 medical units that are
registered, and in 2004 there were more than 7,000 kidney transplants. (This
number is only a little less than the number of those done in the United
States.) Among them, the number of family kidney transplants is several hundred.
In the case of liver transplants, there were 78 cases in eight years from 1991
to 1998, and there were cases of long-term survival from the transplant. After
1998, this number increased dramatically. There were 118, 254, and 486 cases in
1999, 2000 and 2001, respectively. In 2002 there were 996 cases, and over 1,300
cases occurred in 2003. According to a report from The Beijing News on
June 23, 2005, there were more than 2,000 liver transplants in 2004. Take an
example from the Oriental Organ Transplant Center in Tianjin City, according to
an interview from the deputy chief of the center, they did 311 liver transplants
in the first six months of 2005. All the numbers listed above are from
incomplete and conservative statistics, so the actual number of transplants
could be larger. Actually, in the past few years China has become a hot market
for organ transplants. Many Koreans, Japanese, Taiwanese, Australians and
Israelis have come to China for organ transplants. According to an estimate by
the Korean medical community, about 1,000 Koreans have had organ-transplant
surgeries in Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou per year in recent years. Organs from prisoner corpses are far from enough for such a large number of
organ transplants. There are (or were) about 6,000 Falun Gong practitioners
jailed in the Sujiatun Concentration Camp by the CCP. According to witnesses,
three-fourths of those 6,000 Falun Gong practitioners have been killed for their
organs. According to a report from the World Organization to Investigate the
Persecution of Falun Gong, there is a huge human organ market in the Sujiatun
District of Shenyang City, Liaoning Province. The organ harvesting in the Sujiatun Concentration Camp further exposes the
evil nature of the CCP. We hope that those who have been deceived by the CCP
will wake up and see the CCP clearly for what it is. Let us stand together and
be the voice of justice to stop this ongoing brutal, evil persecution and stop
this tragedy. March 27, 2006 |