US House Members Want Answers on Transplantation Abuse in China
The Epoch Times
By Gary Feuerberg
Epoch Times Staff
WASHINGTON—Approximately one-fourth of the membership of the U.S. House of Representatives has co-signed a letter asking the Secretary of State to “release any information” the department has “relating to transplant abuses in China.”
A “dear colleague” letter from Congressmen Robert E. Andrews (D-N.J.) and Christopher H. Smith (R-N.J.) asking their fellow House members to co-sign the letter to Clinton states that “serious allegations suggest unimaginable abuses have occurred” in the practice of organ transplantation in China.
Andrews and Smith refer to “testimony implicating Chinese hospitals and doctors in the practice of forced organ harvesting from prisoners, to allegedly include from living practitioners of the Falun Gong spiritual movement, Uyghurs, Tibetans and House Christians.”
The letter to Clinton asks in particular for the release of documents regarding organ harvesting that former Chongqing deputy mayor Wang Lijun may have transmitted during his stay in the U.S. Consulate in Chengdu, Sichuan Province, on Feb. 6.
“If such evidence was received and brought to light,” the letter states, “measures could be taken to help stop such abominable abuses.”
Out of a total House membership of 435, 106 representatives from 33 states signed the letter to Clinton, as of Oct. 3 when sponsorship closed.
According to the Congressional Research Office (CRS), “Dear Colleague” letters are official correspondence distributed in bulk to Members in both chambers.” They are primarily used by Members to persuade others to cosponsor or oppose a bill, but they can be used for other matters, as was the case here.
In 2006, The Epoch Times broke the story that China’s lucrative organ transplant industry was being supplied with the organs of Falun Gong practitioners—the largest group of prisoners of conscience in China today.
Since then, much analysis and investigation, corroborated by witness testimony, has led to the publication of two books that conclude that tens of thousands of Falun Gong practitioners have been killed for their organs: Bloody Harvest: Organ Harvesting of Falun Gong Practitioners in China, by David Kilgour and David Matas in 2009, and State Organs: Transplant Abuse in China, edited by David Matas and Torsten Trey, M.D., in 2012.
Wang Lijun was directly involved in organ harvesting practices. He founded a research center on organ transplantation while he was police chief of Jinzhou City, Liaoning Province. The center conducted several thousand organ transplant operations, with unexplained organ sources.
Bill Gertz reported in the Free Beacon Feb. 10 that two U.S. officials told him that Wang supplied the consulate with damaging information about Wang Lijun’s boss in Chongqing, Bo Xilai.
Chinese-language news websites, citing unnamed sources in the Chinese regime, have reported that the information Wang handed over in Chengdu included details about the atrocity of forced, live organ harvesting.
Hearing Testimony
The letter to Clinton referred to the Sept. 12 House hearing “Organ Harvesting of Religious and Political Dissidents by the Chinese Communist Party,” which prompted the letter.
The witnesses implicated Chinese hospitals and doctors in the practice of forced organ harvesting from prisoners, consisting mostly of living practitioners of the Falun Gong spiritual movement but including as well, Uyghurs, Tibetans and “House” Christians.
Damon Noto, M.D., from Doctors Against Forced Organ Harvesting (DAFOH), spoke of “an overabundance of organs [in China] accessible for organ transplantation,” a commodity that is scarce everywhere else. He reported that Chinese hospitals advertised on the Internet that they could provide organs within weeks and even schedule the needed organ in advance.
The average wait time for a kidney, for example, in the United States is over three years, said Dr. Noto.
“Some hospital websites were even bold enough to state that their transplant results were superior because they were able to test the living donor’s kidney function prior to the harvesting,” said Dr. Noto.
Dr. Noto referred to the experience of Dr. Jacob Lavee, Director of the Heart Transplant Unit at Sheba Medical Center of Israel, who was told by a patient that he was scheduled for a heart transplant in China in two weeks. Dr. Lavee was shocked to learn that his patient indeed went to China and received the heart transplant on the exact day scheduled.
The organ harvesting business is “extremely profitable” in China, Dr. Noto said. He referred to one transplantation center website in 2006 from Shenyang, which advertised a kidney transplant for US$62,000; a liver transplant for US$98,000-130,000; a heart transplant for US$130,000-160,000; a cornea transplant for US$30,000.
Dr. Noto provided evidence of prisoners of conscience being the primary donors. He said that Falun Gong practitioners who had escaped from China told him that often they were subjected to blood and urine testing, and had physical and ultrasound evaluations multiple times, while their fellow inmates did not.
Many of these prisoners underwent various form of torture. Dr. Noto concluded, “it is hard to believe that the expensive tests were being done for the benefit of the health of the prisoner.”
Charles Lee, M.D. is a Falun Gong practitioner who was imprisoned for three years in China. He testified at the hearing that while imprisoned blood samples were taken without his being told the reason. He said that but for the international attention on his case, he could have been a victim like thousands of anonymous Falun Gong practitioners.
Ethan Gutmann, an investigator into China’s organ transplantation practices and author of Losing the New China, discussed eight Falun Gong practitioners he interviewed whose names he provided.
The practitioners had undergone peculiar medical tests, which he said, were “strikingly similar.” The doctor was usually from the military, drew a large volume of blood, and had a chest x-ray and urine sample taken. Then he described the examination of the corneas.
“Did the doctor ask any of them to trace the movement of his light? Did he wiggle his fingers to check the peripheral vision? No. Only the corneas. Nothing involving brain function, no hammer on the knee, no lymph nodes, no examination of ears or mouth or genitals—the doctors checked the retail organs and nothing else.”
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