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Information Pointing to the CCP Concentration Camps Harvesting Organs from Living Victims: Analyzing 123 Organ Transplant-Related Patents
(Clearwisdom.net) In Mainland China, when you type in "organ
transplant" on the patent website, it will show 123 organ
transplant-related patents from 1985 to April 2005. One patent in 2005, 12
patents in 2004, 22 patents in 2003, 20 patents in 2002, 11 patents in 2001, 16
patents in 2000,12 patents in 1999, 32 patents in 1998, 5 patents in 1997, 5
patents in 1996, 5 patents in 1995, 5 patents in 1994, 4 patents in 1993, and 1
patent in 1992, and 1 patent in 1985 - for a total of 123. The number of patents by applicants from Mainland China is 62. The number of
patents by applicants from Taiwan and other countries is 61. The results from analyzing the 123 patents: We noticed an obvious difference in quantity before and after 1999. From 1999
to 2005, there were 94 patents in seven years. (In Mainland China, it takes
about one and a half years to obtain a patent. The actual numbers are way beyond
what we saw listed, but let's just use this number for now.) This gives an
average of 13.4 patents a year; from 1985 to 1998, there were 29 patents for
those fourteen years, averaging 2 patents a year. After 1999, the average number
of patents was six times higher. Even counting from 1993 to 1998, there were 27
patents, averaging 4.5 a year. The recent number is still three times higher.
The number of organ transplant-related patents has risen dramatically since
1999. From 1985 to 1998, there were 22 organ transplant-related patents applied for
outside of China, while there were 7 applied for from inside China. The patents
from abroad were three times the number in China. The seven patents from China
were for apparatus, none for pharmacy or basic research. From 1999 to 2005,
there were 39 patents applied for outside of China, while there were 55 patents
applied for from China. In 1999, there were 10 patents from outside China and
only 2 patents from China. In 2003, there were 16 patents from China compared to
only 6 patents from abroad, almost 3 times the number from abroad. In 2004,
there were 12 patents from China, none from outside China. During this period,
there were a large number of patents applied for in pharmacy, research and
practical clinical usage. The organ transplant field in Mainland China has been
developing rapidly. Before 1999, there were only two colleges that together obtained two research
patents. One was from Xian Medical College in 1998 and the other was from the
Chinese Medicine Research College in 1993. From 2002 to 2004, a three-year
period, there were nine colleges that applied for 13 patents, and they were all
top rated colleges. Sichuan University applied for one in 2003, two in 2004.
Baoding Hebei University Pharmacy College in Hebei Province applied for one in
2004. Beijing University applied for one in 2003 and 2004. Nanjing University
applied for one in 2004. Xian Jiaotong University applied for one in 2004.
Chinese Pharmacy College applied for one in 2004. Zhejiang University applied
for one in 2002 and 2003. Qinghua University applied for one in 2002. Fudan
University applied for one in 2002. From the dates of patent applications and
the fact that such applications would take 2-3 years to complete, it can be
deduced that these universities received the research projects at around the
same time, that is, around 1999. Inferences from this analysis: From our analysis, we discovered pharmacy companies abroad had applied for
patents in Mainland China many times. This means that there was a market there
for them to sell the medicine and related apparatus. If we could clarify the
truth to these companies, we might be able to cut the supply of organ
transplant-related medicine and apparatus, and be able to save many Dafa
practitioners' lives. If those personnel related to this work can help to
investigate, the truth will be revealed and expose the evil. It is a bit
complicated since some big companies might not cooperate out of concerns for
their profit, so we need to deal with different situations differently in this
unusual time: (A) Strive to have companies temporarily hold off from selling organ
transplant-related medicine and apparatus. (B) Strive to get approval from the Pharmacy Association and FDA to put a
limit to some big companies' business-only oriented behavior. (C) Strive to get agreements from big companies to hold off from selling
until after the investigation. (D) Strive to get the companies to request a list of names of organ
recipients and medicine given according to those people (may need to cooperate
with the Investigation Committee). (E) The bottom line is to ask the big companies to hold off selling before
July (the Mainland organ transplant-related law takes effect in July) The original content of the patents may be obtained with the help of the
patent service companies. It is better to download the entire article, as it may
be used as evidence in the future. |