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Sunday Herald, UK: Pressure on UK government to act over Chinese organ harvesting? Call for action ahead of Beijing Olympics By Bridget Morris
A SENIOR EXPERT on Asia has demanded Britain "take action now"
against China, which he says is continuing to harvest organs "à la
carte" from practitioners of the suppressed Falun Gong movement who are
executed in prison. David Kilgour, Canada's former secretary of state for Asia-Pacific, who will
visit the Houses of Parliament this week, told the Sunday Herald that Britain is
leaving the issue of organ harvesting unchecked and allowing Chinese officials
to kill prisoners for their organs with impunity. He put this down to Britain not wishing to create a diplomatic incident in
the lead-up to the Beijing Olympics, concerns about protecting trade with China
and the government "not listening to the expert advice they are
given". Kilgour and his colleague, lawyer David Matas, studied the transplant market
in China in 2006 - their report concludes that several thousand organs have been
illegally harvested from Falun Gong prisoners since 1999. Kilgour, one of
Canada's longest-serving MPs, is now set to warn the UK government and British doctors that China must be brought to book over the practice, which
it officially denies takes place. He said: "I realise it is difficult to comprehend, but prisoners,
especially Falun Gong prisoners, are being killed for their organs in China
right now. They are executing prisoners "a la carte' so that wealthy
recipients get organs. "Pressure must be put on the Chinese government to stop this, especially
before the Beijing Olympics next summer. I would also call for doctors,
diplomats, politicians, and ordinary people to start demanding answers about
this, because, frankly, the Chinese government has none." Tens of thousands of Falun Gong practitioners have been jailed in China for
holding meetings or owning literature about their faith. According to Amnesty
International, China carries out 80% of the global total of sanctioned
executions each year. There is also evidence from Kilgour and others that
prisoners in many jails are given regular blood tests, the purpose of which is
unclear. Others also back Kilgour's research. British transplant expert Professor Tom
Treasure described organ harvesting from prisoners as a "holocaust",
noting in the Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine this month that health
tourists from the West are contributing to the problem of Falun Gong [detainees]
being killed for their kidneys, hearts, lungs and corneas. Comparing the practice in China to the organised euthanasia of
institutionalised patients in 1930s Germany, and noting the oddity of the high
number of transplants offered in China at short notice, Treasure wrote of his
"horror" at colleagues being complicit in the trade, and that
"the story seems horrific to the poi n t of being almost beyond
belief". There are signs China may be ready to deal with the issue, though. In
November deputy health minister Huang Jiefu admitted "most of the organs
for sale are from executed prisoners", but said huge domestic and
international demand is causing "a shortfall". Although Huang promised
to introduce a code of conduct, Kilgour says that, as most Falun Gong
[detainees] are young and healthy, they are at huge risk of being executed
"to order" for their organs. He said: "People in Scotland may find this so beyond normal
comprehension so as not to believe it. But it is true." Posting date: 4/2/2007
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