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U.N.: China moves to stop taking organs from prisoners

ASSOCIATED PRESS

China’s former vice minister of health Dr. Huang Jiefu talked during a press conference on ‘Organ Trafficking and Transplant Tourism’, at the Chinese embassy in Rome on Wednesday. China is stepping up its efforts to convince the international medical community that it has stopped using executed prisoners as organ donors.

ROME >> The World Health Organization says China has taken steps to end its once-widespread practice of harvesting organs from executed prisoners but that it’s impossible to know what is happening across the entire country.

At a Vatican conference on organ trafficking this week, a former top Chinese official said the country had stopped its unethical program, but critics remain unconvinced.

In an interview today, WHO’s Jose Ramon Nunez Pena said he personally visited about 20 hospitals in China last year and believes the country has reformed. But he acknowledged that it was still possible “there may still be hidden things going on.” China has more than 1 million medical centers, although only 169 are authorized to do transplants.

Nunez Pena said he had seen data including organ transplant registries and was convinced the country was now shifting away from illegally harvesting organs.

“What is clear to me is that they’re changing,” he said. “But in a country as huge as China, we can’t know everything.”

Earlier this week, critics questioned China’s claims of reform and suggested that WHO should be allowed to conduct surprise investigations and interview donor relatives. The U.N. health agency has no authority to enter countries without their permission.

China’s Dr. Haibo Wang responded that China shouldn’t be singled out for such treatment while other countries were not. The head of the Chinese delegation, Dr. Huang Jiefu, told the conference there had been an increase in both living and deceased voluntary organ donors following China’s crackdown on the illicit organ trade.

“It sounds a little hard to believe that China could have so quickly made this change to its organ donation program,” said Vivek Jha, executive director of the George Institute for Global Health in India.

He said China should provide the international transplant community with data to prove that its organs are no longer being illegally procured.

“It could be the case that China has changed,” he said. “The problem is we just have not seen the information to prove it.”

Nunez Pena said tracking illegal organ activities was inherently difficult and that countries with past problems like India and Costa Rica appeared to have improved practices, but that officials couldn’t be absolutely certain that was the case. He said WHO officials were now focusing on other countries like Egypt and Sri Lanka as worrisome centers of organ harvesting.

Campbell Fraser, an organ trafficking researcher at Griffith University in Australia, agreed the trends over the past few years have shown a drop in the number of foreigners going to China for transplants and an increase of organ seekers heading to the Middle East.

At a press conference at the Chinese Embassy in Italy following the two-day Vatican organ conference, Fraser said migrants — including Syrians, Somalis and Eritreans — sometimes resort to selling off a kidney to pay traffickers to get them or their families to Europe.

“Egypt is where the biggest problem is at the moment,” he said, adding that it has the best medical facilities in the region and can perform the live donor surgeries.

He estimated as many as 10 such illicit transplants could be happening per week, though he had no statistics and said he based his research largely on anecdotal information from recipients, law enforcement, doctors and even some organ “brokers.”

Fraser said he has access to transplant patient “chat boards” because he himself had a kidney transplant in his native Australia in 2003.

Nunez Pena said it was likely that organ trafficking would find its way to conflict-plagued regions.

“We’re hearing about a lot of problems in Egypt, Pakistan and the Philippines,” he said, predicting that authorities were poised to break up an organ smuggling ring in Egypt in the next few weeks. “Wherever you have vulnerable people, you will see these kinds of problems.”

5 responses to “U.N.: China moves to stop taking organs from prisoners”

  1. iwanaknow says:

    Harvest from USA prisoners that are on death row? what could possibly go wrong with that?

    those 7,000 drug dealers/users killed in the Philippines….did their organs get harvested? I wanna know.

  2. RC32 says:

    Finally made the World/National printed News. Heard this about 15 years ago. That Chinese Communist government were arresting and outlawing practicioners of Falun Gong by the thousands, sending them to prison, murdering them and selling their organs. And some of my family and friends said I was a conspiracy nut.

  3. nuuanusam says:

    China has been doing that for years, and has been denying that for years. Sometime, they just execute a non-deathrow prison just because he is a match.

  4. justmyview371 says:

    I don’t see anything wrong with this practice, other than some people’s fears that the Chinese government can’t be trusted to make decisions based on whether they need organs. In fact, they could sentence people to death for anything such as a traffic violation.

  5. fiveo says:

    Organ harvesting is big business for the ChiComs. They execute people by shooting them in the head with a AK47 type rifle at very close range, usually
    from the back. Always found this rather curious but this makes sense as they fully intend to harvest any and all the organs, tissues they can which is why
    they do not shoot them in the body or hang them. Very clever these pakes.

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