(Minghui.org) “American policy-makers should clearly condemn this persecution against Falun Gong and declare it a genocide,” wrote Nina Shea, Director of the Hudson Institute’s Center for Religious Freedom, in an article titled “The CCP Wages a Second Genocide – against Falun Gong” published in National Review on February 4.
More specifically, this genocide “is signaled by several rigorous reports establishing that large numbers of its detained practitioners have been forcibly subject to medical procedures that inevitably kill them.” These reports indicated that after declaring a government intent to eliminate Falun Gong 20 years ago, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) “has targeted Falun Gong detainees for involuntary organ harvesting, in addition to mass internment, disappearance, and torture.”
“This means that victims are either killed while or shortly before their hearts, livers, lungs, and kidneys are surgically excised to be sold in what Beijing boasts is the world’s largest organ-transplant market,” explained Shea. She added that critical new finding from U.N. experts have strengthened the case for genocide.
The persecution started in 1999 with an order from Jiang Zemin, former Chinese president and CCP General Secretary. Beijing estimated that there were about 70 million Falun Gong practitioners at the time. The U.S. State Department noted that the CCP launched “an extralegal, party-run security apparatus to eliminate the Falun Gong movement.”
Citing studies documented in Bloody Harvest, a book by former Canadian government minister David Kilgour along with experts David Matas and Ethan Gutmann, Shea wrote, “The source for most of [China’s] massive volume of organs for transplants is the killing of innocents: Uyghurs, Tibetans, House Christians and primarily, practitioners of the spiritually based set of exercises Falun Gong.”
Other studies have also confirmed evidence that Falun Gong practitioners are not only among the victims of an involuntary organ-harvesting industry, but likely have been its main victims over the past two decades. There have been at least two such assessments in 2020. One from Matthew Robertson of the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation (VOC), whose assessment was published by the Jamestown Foundation, the other from the China Tribunal, an independent panel led by Sir Geoffrey Nice, who headed the recent Uyghur Tribunal as well.
The assessments were consistent with the fact that “China’s hospitals schedule transplants on demand, within days or weeks” as documented in Bloody Harvest, in sharp contrast with NIH records that indicate that the median wait for kidneys in the United States is four years. According to an archived 2004 version of a China-based transplant company’s website, prospective foreign patients are told, “In China we carry out living donor kidney transplants. It is completely different from the deceased body [corpse] kidney transplants you hear about in Japanese hospitals and dialysis centres.”