organ harvesting
organ harvesting

By Nicole Hao

In comments made during an interview with overseas Chinese media, a Chinese surgeon gave details about a liver transplant operation that he believes may be linked to the communist regime’s practice of mass organ harvesting from prisoners. 

On Dec. 19, the Chinese-language edition of The Epoch Times, a U.S.-based publication, interviewed Dr. Zhong, who provided documents confirming his identity and occupation. In order to protect his identity, The Epoch Times omitted Zhong’s full name.

The People’s Republic of China (PRC) government has been accused of running a large-scale organ harvesting scheme since at least the mid-1990s, turning huge profits through the murder of those jailed for their religious beliefs. According to a growing number of witnesses and experts, the primary victims are practitioners of Falun Gong, a banned Chinese spiritual practice.  

During his postgraduate studies, Zhong had the opportunity to participate in a variety of surgical operations at different hospitals in China. In 2011, he took part in a “special liver transplant” at the First Affiliated Hospital of Zhejiang University’s School of Medicine, where he was working as an intern surgeon. 

One night, staff at the hospital called Zhong after 11:00 p.m. for a transplant. “They said there wasn’t a surgeon available and they wanted me to perform the operation. I wanted to learn and practice more. It was really a good opportunity for me,” he said.

Upon arriving at the hospital, Zhong found police uniforms in the locker room. Then he saw several people dressed in visitors’ surgical gowns. They were taller and stronger than the average doctors and nurses.

“It was very strange,” he recalled. “The locker room is for doctors’ and nurses’ exclusive use. Why were there police uniforms there?”

Zhong then saw several of the visitors inside a room adjacent to the operating room. When they were to start the transplant, a nurse brought the liver in from the first room. “I believe that the donor was in the operating room next door,” Zhong said. 

The patient had cirrhosis. Zhong spent about eight hours performing the transplant operation, and went home directly afterward.

When he returned to the hospital, Zhong heard that a cornea transplant operation had been performed in the same building during the liver transplant. 

“Normally, the hospital won’t perform a cornea transplant operation at the same time as a liver transplant,” Zhong said. “But that night, the transplant operations were done in parallel with each other. It’s very strange.”

“I did surgeries at many hospitals in Hangzhou [the capital of Zhejiang Province]. I know the hospitals well,” Zhong said. “The First Affiliated Hospital of Zhejiang University School of Medicine is one of the best hospitals for hepatobiliary transplantation. It has performed many more operations than other hospitals in eastern China”

Zhong thinks that the person who supplied the cornea was the same person as the liver donor, and that it’s likely the hospital used all the organs it could get from the donor. 

“The donor must be a political prisoner. That’s the reason why policemen were there,” Zhong said. He said he didn’t ask for the donor’s background, but soon after he learned that the donor might be a Falun Gong practitioner. 

Mass Killing 

According to Ethan Gutmann, an American investigative journalist, China has been harvesting the organs of prisoners since at least the mid-1990s, when it was carrying out such operations in Xinjiang, a province on the far western Chinese border. 

In the 2000s, the business assumed horrific scale. In 1999, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) banned Falun Gong, a spiritual practice that had tens of millions of adherents. The practice was demonized as a harmful cult, and hundreds of thousands of people found themselves behind bars, where they could be beaten or tortured if they refused to give up their faith. 

In June 2019, the London-based China Tribunal concluded that organ harvesting was taking place in China with the CCP’s approval, and that it showed no signs of stopping. Experts like Canadian rights lawyer David Matas fear that Uyghur Muslims, over 1 million of whom are believed to be incarcerated in labor camps, could be replacing Falun Gong practitioners as the biggest source of involuntary organ donors. 

The first allegations that Falun Gong practitioners were being murdered for their organs were raised in 2006. However, the difficulty of conducting on-the-ground research in China has forced investigators to rely on circumstantial methods such as discrepancies in official statistics and witness testimony. 

‘There Were Plenty of Donors Before’

At the medical school, faculty told Zhong and others that the donors were executed prisoners, but didn’t allow any questions about who they were or why they had been killed. 

“They know they [the donors] were Falun Gong practitioners,” Zhong later realized. 

Later, Zhong began working with a different team, where he met Zheng Shusen, director of organ transplantation at the First Hospital.

Zheng also formerly directed the Chinese Transplant Congress, and chaired the China Organ Procurement Organization Alliance. Between 2007 and 2017, he was also head of the Zhejiang provincial branch of the China Anti-Cult Association. The latter is an important Communist Party-controlled organization for defaming Falun Gong. 

According to Chinese state-run media, Zheng Shusen’s team had performed over 2,300 liver transplant operations by December 2017. 

“Zheng told us that the donors were fewer than before… He didn’t draw a comparison with any specific year… He said there were plenty of donors before, and they could do a lot of medical research,” Zhong said.

Zheng didn’t elaborate on why there were fewer donors. 

In 2017, Liver International, the official journal of the International Association for the Study of the Liver, retracted an article by Zheng Shusen because he could not produce “credible evidence” that the organs used in his research had been obtained ethically. 

Dr. Zhong said that his experiences made him suspect that there was a darker background to the Chinese organ transplant industry, so he decided to become a general surgeon instead. 

Following graduation, Zhong started to look deeper into the background of the liver transplant he had helped perform. He spoke to others at the medical school and used VPN software to skirt Chinese internet censorship and find out more information about organ harvesting. 

“When I first heard about live organ harvesting, I was very shocked. But the facts I learned were so solid that it’s impossible to deny,” Zhong said. “This is the reason why international magazines removed the Chinese doctors’ work on transplant research.”

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