Sydney Morning Herald: China kills for organs, says report
July 8, 2006 A human rights lawyer and a former cabinet minister in Canada
have added their weight to charges that China has been killing Falun Gong
dissidents so it can use their organs. The lawyer, David Matas, and the former secretary of state
for Asia and the Pacific, David Kilgour, spent two months investigating the
accusations, which China has regularly denied. "It is simply inescapable that this is going on,"
Mr Kilgour told reporters on Thursday as he and Mr Matas released their
findings. They provided English transcripts of phone calls, in
Mandarin, made to detention centres and organ transplant clinics in which
officials said organs from Falun Gong practitioners could be made available for
speedy use. Some of the calls were placed on behalf of Falun Gong by
people inquiring about whether they could get organ transplants. Mr Matas and Mr Kilgour said they carefully examined phone
records and sat with certified Mandarin translators as they listened to the
taped conversations. They also conducted interviews with witnesses in numerous
countries, including Australia, and investigated government records and other
evidence. "Believe me, I used to be a prosecutor," Mr Kilgour
said. "I knew there would be cynicism and I did my utmost to make sure that
everything was satisfactorily and properly and ethically done." One call, made on June 8, was to a Mr Li in the Mishan City
Detention Centre in Heilongjiang province, according to the transcript. "Do
you have Falun Gong [organ] suppliers?" Mr Li was asked. "We used to have, yes," he replied. - "What
about now?" - "Yes" - "Can we come to select, or you provide
directly to us?" "We provide them to you," Mr Li said, adding that
price would be discussed when the caller arrived. He said he had "quite a
few" Falun Gong males younger than 40 from whom organs could be taken. Mr Kilgour released an interview with a woman who said her
former husband, a surgeon, took corneas from about 2000 people over two years.
She said the victims were given injections to cause heart failure. China has banned Falun Gong, a spiritual group, since 1999. [...] Mr Matas and Mr Kilgour conducted their inquiry as unpaid
volunteers at the request of the Coalition to Investigate the Persecution of
Falun Gong, an organisation based in Washington with a branch in Ottawa, but
said their investigation was made independently of this organisation, the news
agency Canadian Press reported. Mr Matas said the practice amounted to a crime against
humanity. "Our findings are shocking. To us, this is a form of evil we have
yet to see on this planet." He said that if China rejected the findings it
should ensure the source of each transplant was recorded and available for
inspection by human rights officials. [...]
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