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Shorter wait for transplant?

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athena
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https://dailycaller.com/2022/05/13/china-organ-harvesting-concentration-camp-xinjiang-uyghur/

An estimated 25,000 to 50,000 detainees from the approximately one million ethnic minorities imprisoned within China’s concentration camps are targeted for organ harvesting each year, Ethan Gutmann, a senior fellow at the Victims of Communist Memorial Foundation, said at a hearing held by New Jersey Republican Rep. Chris Smithand the Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission in Washington, D.C.

The hearing, which featured a panel of experts on China’s organ harvesting practices, follows the April release of an American Journal of Transplantation paper which researched “the intimate involvement of transplant surgeons in China in the execution of prisoners via the procurement of organs.”

“Doctors in China performed organ transplants without following the standard procedures for establishing brain death,” Smith told the hearing, citing the paper which analyzed

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josh avatar
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Some of those prisoners are political detainees 

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athena
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@zexsypmp23 not some, all are political prisoners.

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athena
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It’s like going to the market and pick out the live fish you want to eat. Falun Gong political prisoners target. Here in the US real career criminals are given sex change surgery.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4919373/

Matas reveals that the Falun Gong were consistent in describing their experiences of brutality but, unexpectedly, also reported organ “health checks” that involved the collection of large samples of blood at three monthly intervals and unusual eye examinations that did not seem consistent with standard health examinations. According to Matas, the most “chilling thing” to him was that the blood testing and organ and eye exams appeared confined to detainees who were Falun Gong practitioners and that Falun Gong and minority group detainees from diverse locations and circumstances independently reported being involved in similar tests. These incidental findings seem inexplicable to Matas and Gutmann, who do not believe the “health” examinations were motivated by consideration of the detainee prisoners’ best interests.

Gutmann and Matas form the view that it was possible that detainees’ organs were being assessed and used for transplantation based on the compounding evidence from these reports; the significant increase in transplantation rates in China after the Falun Gong persecution commenced; and speculation regarding forced organ removal that arose from detainee witness reports that executed prisoners’ bodies are cremated before their families are notified of the death or have seen the body of the deceased. A breakthrough occurred in Matas and Gutmann’s investigations when a doctor confessed his role in the removal of organs from an executed prisoner.

Dr. Enver Tohti, a former surgeon from Xinjiang, China, also is interviewed about his involvement in the removal of organs prior to a state-sanctioned death. He describes how he and his surgical team were co-opted by a senior doctor to gather surgical equipment, without explanation. They accompanied a supervisor to a site where a planned execution was under way. Dr. Tohti describes how he and his team were pressured again to remove the liver and kidneys of a prisoner who had been shot but who showed signs of life until the organs were excised.

Gutmann argues that this practice is not isolated and that Falun Gong practitioners

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