Berita ini bisa benar bisa pula tidak. Tetapi seandainya benar, sungguh
mengerikan. Banyak orang Indonesia ke China untuk transplantasi organ.
Apakah itu berarti kita "membantu" pengambilan organ tubuh secara paksa dan
tidak manusiawi (istilah kerennya: melanggar HAM)?
KM

Call for More Doctors to Help End Organ Pillaging by Chinese Regime

Cindy Chan
Epoch Times
Monday, Oct 13, 2008

OTTAWA
Over the last two years David Matas and David Kilgour have travelled 
the world seeking support to press China’s communist regime to stop 
harvesting and selling the organs of Falun Gong prisoners of conscience.

The international human rights lawyer and former cabinet minister toured 
over 40 countries after releasing their 2006 report confirming the 
occurrence of large-scale organ seizures from Falun Gong practitioners since

the practice was banned by the regime in 1999.

Since 2001, the regime has killed thousands of imprisoned practitioners and 
sold their organs for large profits, often to “organ tourists” from wealthy

countries, said Mr. Kilgour.


In January 2007 Mr. Kilgour and Mr. Matas published Bloody Harvest, an 
updated report documenting new evidence.

They have won support not only from parliamentarians and government bodies 
but also from medical communities worldwide. Earlier this month they were in

Kingston urging more doctors to help.

Speaking for the second year in a row at Queen’s University’s annual Health

and Human Rights Conference, they outlined some notable successes so far.

Doctors’ Support in Canada and Worldwide

The most recent support came from the American Society of Nephrology (ASN), 
which published an article in the September edition of its clinical journal 
saying that “All countries should take steps to govern organ donation and 
transplantation, thereby ensuring patient safety and prohibiting unethical 
practices.”

That was the consensus of more than 150 representatives of scientific and 
medical bodies from 78 countries, government officials, social scientists, 
and ethicists, who met in Istanbul, Turkey from April 30 to May 2 this year.

At the Istanbul Summit, participants finalized a declaration opposing organ 
trafficking (illicit sale of human organs), transplant commercialism 
(treatment of organs as commodities), and transplant tourism (when organs 
given to foreign patients undermine a country’s ability to provide organs 
for its own population).

Mr. Kilgour also referred to an August 2008 Australian news article noting 
“useful pressure”. The article reported that Jeremy Chapman, the Australian

president of The Transplantation Society (TTS), promised that his members 
would ask Chinese authorities for an explanation when a non-Chinese person 
travelled to China to acquire an organ.

The TTS convened the Istanbul Summit along with the International Society of

Nephrology.

A July 2008 commentary in The Lancet, U.K.’s medical journal, said the 
Istanbul Declaration “will reinforce the resolve of governments and 
international organizations to develop laws and guidelines to bring an end 
to wrongful practices”.

However, “Still, more is needed from the transplant and medical 
communities,” it said, including professional societies, journals, drug 
companies, and funding agencies.

Prior to Istanbul, Israel’s legislature approved a new organ donation law in

March 2008 stipulating that brokering sales of organs in Israel or overseas 
is a criminal offence.

To stop Mainland Chinese and Taiwanese doctors from brokering Taiwanese 
patients’ organ transplants in China, in October 2007 the Taiwanese 
government announced it will ban Chinese doctors engaged in this brokering 
from visiting Taiwan.

And the U.S. National Kidney Foundation issued a statement against 
transplant tourism in January 2007.

Canadian doctors and parliamentarians have also spoken up.

Last December in the House of Commons, Manitoba MP Steven Fletcher tabled a 
petition from doctors across Canada urging the federal government to issue 
travel advisories warning that “organ transplants in China are sourced 
almost entirely from non-consenting people, whether prisoners sentenced to 
death or Falun Gong practitioners”.

More recently, Ontario MP Borys Wrzesnewskyj introduced Bill C-500, a 
ground-breaking piece of legislation that would make it illegal for 
Canadians to get an organ transplant abroad if the organ was bought or taken

from an unwilling victim.

Part of Wrzesnewskyj’s motivation for drafting the bill came from reading 
the Kilgour-Matas report, which found that Canadians are also among the 
organ tourists who travel to China for transplants.

Mounting Evidence

“David Matas and I have assembled more than 50 pieces of evidence over the 
past two years which indicate that our conclusions about ongoing 
organ-pillaging across China are valid”, said Mr. Kilgour.

In their travels, the pair has continued to receive additional evidence 
including “new examples of Falun Gong practitioners who in Chinese detention

were systematically blood tested while their co-prisoners who were not 
practitioners were not blood tested”, said Mr. Matas.

Falun Gong practitioner He Lizhi also spoke at the conference. He was jailed

for three and a half years in China and spoke of “forced heavy slave labour,

electric shocks, [and] frequent deprivation of sleep and use of the toilet” 
in prison.

Most practitioners withheld their identities to protect relatives and 
friends from persecution under the regime’s policy of “guilt by 
association”, Mr. He said. They “were soon sent to unknown 
places”,”officially relocated”.

What happened to them remained a mystery to him until news about organ 
harvesting broke.

“They could have been killed by organ harvesting crimes the [greatest] evil 
ever on this planet”. he said.

The report cites 41,500 unexplained organ transplants from 2000 to 2005 ”the

six-year period since the persecution of Falun Gong began” that do not come 
from convicted executed prisoners, the brain-dead, or family donors.

While the Chinese regime continues to deny allegations of organ harvesting, 
peer review has supported the conclusions of the Kilgour-Matas report.

University of Minnesota Associate Director of the Program in Human Rights 
and Medicine Kirk Allison, British transplant surgeon Tom Treasure, and Yale

University thesis student Hao Wang “have all independently from us and each 
other confirmed the conclusions of the Report and supported its accuracy”,
said Mr. Matas.

In 2008, United Nations Special Rapporteurs Manfred Nowak and Asma Jahangir 
reiterated their previous year’s request that the Chinese regime give a full

explanation to respond to the charges of organ harvesting.

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