CCP Organ Transplant History
By Zhenjun
(Clearwisdom.net) The modern organ allograft transplant
originated in the former Soviet Union. In 1936, Dr. U. Voronoy
transplanted a human kidney from a dead body into a young patient
who had kidney failure as a result of mercury poisoning. The
patient died 48 hours later. The Chinese Communist Party (CCP)
adopted this transplant technique from the Soviet Union and
utilized its army to perform transplants. Army medical personnel
were encouraged to take organs from living beings for better
quality. In the beginning of this era, the CCP recruited
highly-qualified physicians to join the army and even assigned them
to act as personal physicians for the Party's Central Committee
members.
CCP Central Health Care System in Favor of Organ Transplant
Surgeons Organ transplants in China began in late 1950. In the beginning,
researchers experimented with animals. Then in the 1960s, Dr. Wu
Jieping, a urological surgeon, conducted the first human kidney
transplant. Dr. Wu led a "Beijing Volunteer Surgical Team" during the Korean
war and received high honors from the CCP in 1951. He joined the
CCP in 1956. During the Cultural Revolution, the leading cadres of
the CCP Central Committee abolished the "health-care physicians for
Party leaders" system and formed a health care team to provide care
to all Party leaders. Dr. Wu headed this team. From a medical
perspective, it makes little sense that a urological surgeon would
take the post of health care chief for high ranking leaders. Such a
role would normally be given to a cardiologist or a physician
specializing in other chronic diseases common among the elderly. A
urological surgeon would normally play a supportive role, providing
consultation for diagnosis and treatment of diseases in the urinary
and urogenital systems. Dr. Wu was assigned to head the team, not
only for his medical knowledge, of course. Dr. Wu was the attending physician in charge of cancer treatment
for Zhou Enlai. In 1971, he examined Mr. Zhou and found cancer cell
mutations in his bladder. It was the early stage of bladder cancer.
The cure rate is high if the cancer cells are removed in a timely
manner. The medical team suggested surgery immediately, and Zhou
agreed. Dr. Wu requested permission from Mao Zedong (CCP Chairman
from 1949-1976) to do the surgery. (CCP rules stated that any
surgery on CCP leaders required Mao's approval.) Dr. Wu received
approval--over a year later, far beyond the optimal time to perform
the surgery on Mr. Zhou. In his approval, Mao gave instructions
that the surgery should follow a two-step procedure. The first step
was to perform a thorough re-examination, the second step was to
operate. However, when CCP official Ye passed the approval message
on to Dr. Wu, he said, "As you know, there is of course, no second
step. " To guarantee compliance with CCP demands, Dr. Wu ignored his own
patients' needs and disregarded the most basic medical knowledge.
His medical skills were used solely to serve the highest political
purpose of the CCP. Dr. Wu carried out the CCP's demands regardless
of professional ethics. A highly skilled professional without
medical ethics, of course, was valued by the CCP. This was the
reason that an organ transplant physician like Wu was successful
within the CCP system. Army Communication Linked to Kidney Transplant Dr. Li Yan Tang was a urological surgeon who performed a
prostate operation for Mr. Deng at Hospital 301 in Beijing. To
specialize in urology, Dr. Li followed Dr Xu Dian-B and Dr. Wu,
starting in 1959. Dr. Li was involved in the treatment of seven out
of 10 marshals, and eight out of ten generals during the mid to
late 1970s. Dr. Li performed his first kidney transplant in October 1977 and
the result was a disaster. At that time, no transplant patient in
Beijing lived for more than one month. Only one transplant patient,
operated on by Dr. Xiong Ru Cheng at Shanghai Zhongshan Hospital,
survived for one and a half years. To deal with the problem, they
established criteria to shorten the time of kidney ischemia and
obtain early resumption of kidney function. Dr. Xiong stated in his
article, "To save time, police cleared the path for all vehicles
carrying organs, so they were undeterred by traffic on their way to
the hospital. We even utilized an army communication system to
improve communication between staff transporting kidneys to the
hospital and medical staff in the operating room in order to
shorten waiting time. The operating room was immediately notified
as soon as the kidney was removed and good for engraft, so that it
was ready once the kidney arrived. There were no delays at either
end." When Dr. Li received the kidney, Dr. Chou would have had the
operating room ready. At that time, the person in charge of the
army communication system was Ye Xiang-zhen, daughter of the
powerful CCP army marshal Ye. Dr. Li did not reveal the sources of the kidney donations. For a
healthy kidney, which could be transplanted with little to no
complications (shortened ischemia period), police cars were
dispatched and the Department of Transportation was in full
cooperation. Military personnel worked on maintaining open
communication lines, as this important task could not be entrusted
to civilians. It was the "Crown Prince Party" who ordered the army
to carry out the mission. The best way to shorten the ischemia
period of a removed kidney was to harvest the kidneys from living
persons. The CCP withheld information regarding whether the source
of the kidneys were from executed prisoners or obtained from living
persons. A surgeon from Hospital 301 in Beijing confirmed in a telephone
interview in April 2006 that she did liver transplants herself. The
surgeon added that the sources of the organs were a "state secret"
and that anyone revealing the sources "could be disqualified from
doing such operations." Central Health Bureau Chief Acts as Major Player in Liver
Transplants Because of his wide array of foreign contacts, Dr. Huang Jiefu,
who was an organ transplant specialist, was appointed by the CCP as
deputy minister of the health department in 2001. This appointment
could best serve its objectives with Dr. Lu at the helm. Dr. Huang
was promoted to secretary of the Central Health Bureau in July 2005
to lead a central health care team, which was formed with
specialists for the care of Central Committee members. As in Dr.
Wu's case, the reason for appointing Dr. Huang, a transplant
surgeon, was that he faithfully fulfilled the political needs of
the CCP. Dr. Huang relied on support from the CCP, army forces, and
the Department of Politics and Law for an ongoing supply of living
organs, so he could become an organ transplant expert and better
his professional reputation and social standing in the community.
The CCP chose Dr. Huang for his aspirations and unethical
motivations, and took advantage of his great clinical experience
and exquisite surgical techniques. Dr. Huang thus became the
backbone of the medical field, efficiently and loyally providing
services to the CCP. Before he became deputy minister of health and a high ranking
official of the CCP, Dr. Huang was the chancellor of Zhongshan
Medical University in Guangzhou and secretary of the CCP's local
branch. He worked as a fellow at the medical school of the
University of Sydney, Australia, from 1984-1987. He had been a
visiting medical professor at several foreign universities. He
organized a liver organ transplant team, whose members included
primarily young scholars returning from overseas. The team did 340
clinical liver transplants. He was also the chief editor of China's
first liver transplant monograph, and was recognized as a promoter
and leader for the second wave of China's liver transplants.
Although he insisted that the second liver transplant wave began in
1993, other transplant documents indicated that it started in 1999,
which was the year when the persecution of Falun Gong was
initiated. As indicated in the book, Liver Transplant, which
was published in 2001, liver transplants in China began in 1977,
soon reaching its first climax. Starting in 1998 it reached its
second climax triggered by the effects of multiple elements. The
number of liver transplant cases increased annually. There were 16
cases in 1997, and then the number increased to 27 in 1998. The
number of transplant cases then soared to 118 in 1999. On September 23, 2005, Dr. Huang was a member of a central
delegation group formed and led by Luo Gan to attend the 50th
anniversary celebration of Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region. Luo
Gan was the secretary of the Political and Legislative Affairs
Committee of the CCP Central Committee. On September 28, Dr. Huang
and Dr. Wen Hao, head of the First Affiliated Hospital of Xinjiang
Medical School, performed surgery on a 46-year-old liver cancer
patient. During the surgery they found that the semi-hepatectomy
would not work as originally planned because the cancer had already
infiltrated the patient's liver. Dr. Huang suggested an autologous
liver transplant proposal. The method included removal of the
patient's whole liver to excise cancer tissue and then an engraft
of the clean part of the liver, which would be placed back into the
patient. One matched liver from a donor was needed for allogenic
transplant if the autologous transplant failed. After discussions,
Dr. Huang and the hospital immediately contacted the First
Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou Zhongshan Medical University and
Chongqing Medical University No. 3 Hospital of Southwest Liver
Center for the liver. A matched liver from Chongging arrived at
6:30 p.m. the very next day, and three medical personnel from
Guanzhou-Zhonghan Hospital also rushed to Xinjiang with surgical
equipment and another liver. The duration of cold ischemia of a donor liver stored in a
special solution generally cannot exceed 15 hours, the maximum time
needed to ensure the quality of an allograft. Considering the time
needed to obtain a donor liver and transport the liver to the
transplant facility, plus the several hours needed for the
autologous operation, the only way to ensure a successful
allogeneic transplant if autologous transplant failed, would be to
kill a living person. It is noteworthy that the No. 3 Hospital of
Southeast Liver Center of Chongging is a military medical school.
It is directly managed by the CCP Liberation Army. Two matched
livers were delivered within 24 hours after Dr. Huang made one
phone call. This broke a world's record in the medical field. This
implies that Dr. Huang has command over the military health care
system. It would be impossible for Dr. Huang to achieve such high
efficiency without Luo's political influences and cooperation from
military hospitals and the entire military system. Conclusion The organ transplant industry began to grow when the CCP gained
political power, and a unique organ transplant system in the CCP
was created. Transplant surgeons provide health care to Party
leaders to obtain privileges and take advantage of the army system
and the state's equipment. On the other hand, the CCP uses these
surgeons to train and promote organ transplants. In 1999, when the
CCP started persecuting Falun Gong, its organ transplant system,
which had been prepared and developed for decades, used Falun Gong
practitioners as the primary source of organs. Organ harvesting has
become a special force to persecute Falun Gong. As China's domestic
economy began to prosper, organ transplants from living people
developed from sporadic cases into a large-scale industry. The
direct result was a soaring number of organ transplants in China
between 1999 and 2006.
Posting date: 11/10/2009
Category: Other Related Articles
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