San Francisco Chronicle: Global bazaar in body parts (excerpts)
Thursday, July 20, 2006 IS CHINA harvesting organs from Falun Gong practitioners -- who are killed in
the process? David Kilgour, a former Canadian member of Parliament, and Canadian
human rights attorney David Matas admit that they cannot prove or disprove
allegations that China has killed thousands of Falun Gong practitioners in order
to harvest their organs, but they fear and believe it is happening. So they
wrote in a report (investigation.redirectme.net) released this month for the
Coalition to Investigate the Persecution of the Falun Gong in China. [...] There is no question that China is persecuting Falun Gong members. In 2004,
the U.S. State Department reported that, "tens of thousands of
practitioners remained incarcerated in prisons, extrajudicial
re-education-through-labor camps and psychiatric facilities. Several hundred
Falun Gong adherents reportedly have died in detention due to torture, abuse and
neglect since the crackdown on the Falun Gong began in 1999." Falun Gong is a meditative practice -- sometimes dubbed "Chinese
yoga" -- that practitioner Steve Ispas of Los Altos tells me promotes
"truthfulness, compassion and tolerance." Nonetheless, the People's Republic of China refers to the Falun Gong as an [slanderous
words omitted] and claims that practitioners refuse needed medical treatment
-- which apparently makes it acceptable for the government to jail, and even
torture, believers. You don't have to take the word of Falun Gong members to believe that the
Chinese government is killing adherents for their body parts. China has seen a steep rise in organ transplants over the past six years --
from 18,500 in six-year period 1994 to 1999 -- to 60,000 in 2000 to 2005. (That figure was extrapolated from the China Medical Organ Transplant Association.) With no sign of a rise in the number of brain-dead donors and
family members donating organs, the report found, "the source of 41,500
transplants for the six-year period 2000 to 2005 is unexplained." Web sites for Chinese medical facilities demonstrate that it is quick and
easy to get a human organ in China. One site boasted, "It may take only one
week to find out the suitable (kidney) donor." Maximum wait time: one
month. One clinic advertised an average waiting time for a liver of two weeks,
another cited an average wait of one week. That's fast service for an operation
that requires a fresh, healthy and compatible corpse. The median waiting time in Canada for an organ was 32.5 months in 2003. The report also relied on testimony from witnesses, including a woman who
claims her ex-husband harvested corneas from some 2,000 Falun Gong members. The report also cited transcripts of phone calls to Chinese hospitals in
which doctors offered healthy organs from live Falun Gong donors. America has a role in China's human-parts boom. As The Chronicle reported in
April, a San Mateo father of six plunked down $110,000 and then walked away with
someone else's liver. He didn't bother to find out if the donor was an executed
prisoner; but after the fact, he did go online to inform other affluent
Americans of how they can buy fresh Chinese organs. Speaking on the phone from Washington, Kilgour told me that while the buyer
of Chinese organs may tell himself that his organ donor was a criminal, who was
going to be executed anyway, he believes that when foreigners buy a kidney, a
Chinese official then "chooses a healthy Falun Gong practitioner who would
die in the process of giving you a new kidney." Kilgour and Matas penned 17 recommendations to thwart what they believe is
happening. Among them, nations need to pass laws that require doctors to report
patients who obtain trafficked organs; and medical groups should not invite
Chinese transplant surgeons to conferences. Meanwhile, if the People's Republic
of China wants to convince the world that it is not harvesting organs from Falun
Gong members, it needs to allow human-rights organizations to inspect
re-education camps and interview prisoners. According to the report, one transplant doctor volunteered to a caller that
he had 10 "beating hearts" available at his hospital. If Western
democracies do nothing; if they continue allow their citizens to buy Chinese
organs from unwilling donors, the developing world threatens to devolve into one
big organ bazaar -- with human life itself as a hot commodity available to the
highest bidder.
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