Red Deer Advocate (Canada): Chinese Medical Practices Protested (Photo)
July 28, 2006 A ghoulish display awaited Red Deer residents who wandered through sunny City
Hall Park on Thursday. Two men, representing Chinese doctors, were pretending to
harvest the organs of a Falun Gong practitioner, depicted by a mannequin lying
on a stretcher covered by a bloody sheet. "It's hard for people living in a safe, tolerant community to imagine
what's happening to Chinese people" -- just for practicing a peaceful
religion, said Doris Liu. The Toronto director of the Global Mission to Rescue Persecuted Falun Gong
Practitioners is traveling Alberta to raise public awareness of China's human
rights abuses. Groups such as Amnesty International have long condemned China for
imprisoning, torturing and killing people from minority groups such as Falun
Gong -- a [practice] based on meditation, gentle exercises and "the
cultivation of compassion." The latest stories of cruelty center on China involuntarily harvesting organs
from prisoners, including Falun Gong practitioners. These allegations were recently supported by respected Canadian human rights
lawyer David Matas and former secretary of state for Asia and the Pacific, David
Kilgour. Both men spoke out after spending two months investigating the charges, which
the Chinese government has repeatedly denied. They concluded that "it is simply inescapable that this is going
on," said Kilgour, who recently released phone transcripts from the
investigation. In one call, a Mr. Li in the Mishan City Detention Center confirmed that he
did have organs from Falun Gong members, including quite a few males under the
age of 40 from whom organs could be taken. Kilgour and Matas also interviewed a surgeon's wife who said her husband
harvested corneas from 2,000 people over two years. She said the victims would
first be given an injection to cause heart failure. If China rejects these "shocking" findings, said Matas, it should
ensure hospitals keep records of each transplant for the inspection of human
rights groups. He and Kilgour found that 41,500 transplants performed between 2000 and 2005
had no identified source for the organs. Liu wants the Canadian government to discourage its citizens from going to
China for organ transplants. "We would also like Canadian citizens to ask
their government to condemn the Chinese regime for horrific crimes against
humanity." Liu wants to increase pressure from the international community. "We would urge China to stop the persecutions and open the doors to
their labor camps, prisons and mental hospitals for independent
inspections." Red Deer resident Ed Schulte, who accepted a pamphlet from Liu, said the
United Nations should pressure China for more inspections. "I'd like more
documentation, proof and verification." If people are being killed for their organs, the world needs to know about
it, he added.
Chinese version available at
http://minghui.org/mh/articles/2006/7/30/134343.html
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