The Advertiser (Australia): Inmates on death row 'give organs'
April 21, 2006 Chinese authorities yesterday were accused of "harvesting" the
organs of death row prisoners while they are alive. Execution dates were said to be adjusted to fit in with the needs of wealthy
foreigners who paid thousands of dollars for a healthy kidney, liver or heart. Many of the condemned prisoners were claimed to be adherents of the spiritual
movement Falun Gong, outlawed by China's Communist regime. Zek Halu, a London-based member of the Friends of Falun Gong Europe, said:
"We have documented evidence from witnesses that instead of being
anaesthetised, because of the shortage of drugs, prisoners are beaten
unconscious with special care being taken to avoid liver, kidneys and eyes, then
their organs are removed. "This is big business for the Chinese Government." Up to 10 Britons were thought to have received transplants in China last
year. Labour Member of the European Parliament Robert Evans called for a ban on
"transplant tourists". He said: "Just as it's illegal to go abroad for child sex, it should be
illegal to go abroad to buy an organ, even if the donor has agreed to give
it." With a worldwide shortage of suitable organs, the Chinese trade has
flourished. Many of the internet websites offering transplant services in China claim
donors and patients could be matched in as little as a week, which implies
prisoners may be selected before execution. The British Transplantation Society yesterday condemned the practice of using
prisoners' organs as "unethical" and "unacceptable", saying
it breached the inmates' human rights. In a statement it said: "An accumulating body of evidence suggests the
organs of executed prisoners are being removed for transplantation without the
prior consent of either the prisoner or their family. "This process of organ procurement and the subsequent transplants are
known to involve payment of money and may implicate transplant centres,
patients, and the authorities and judiciary responsible for the prisoners. "The precise numbers of transplants performed using organs derived from
executed prisoners is unknown but the figure is thought to be in the
thousands."
Human rights groups claimed some condemned prisoners had organs removed after
being beaten unconscious to save on anaesthetic.
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