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Prisoners Killed for Organ Harvesting In China
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BlackRiverFallsOffline
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PostPosted: 14-08-2010 17:17    Post subject: Reply with quote

I doubt most of them would be good for either, after the amount of booze/smack/crack/speed/shit/ket/meth and E's that's gone into them.
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drjbrennanOffline
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PostPosted: 14-08-2010 17:44    Post subject: Reply with quote

I do agree, it could be offered as an option to the clean ones. Voluntary, each pint of blood you donate gets X amount of time knocked off your sentence.
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sciotofloodsOffline
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PostPosted: 20-08-2010 23:15    Post subject: Reply with quote

I think it's important to note that all of the linked or quoted stories come from Falun Gong publications or fronts.
Not that I'd put it past the Chinese Gov't, but you have to consider the source.
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BlackRiverFallsOffline
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PostPosted: 21-08-2010 01:08    Post subject: Reply with quote

But is it actually plausible? I'd thought you needed a really good match for organ donation, though i guess if you tested enough people and kept a database of them it could well up your odds substancially.

And who is recieving the organs?
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Pietro_Mercurios
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PostPosted: 21-08-2010 01:23    Post subject: Reply with quote

BlackRiverFalls wrote:
But is it actually plausible? I'd thought you needed a really good match for organ donation, though i guess if you tested enough people and kept a database of them it could well up your odds substancially.

And who is recieving the organs?

You would just need a plenteous supply of donors, usefully cross indexed against possible demand. Preferably fresh and on the hoof.
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ramonmercadoOffline
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PostPosted: 21-08-2010 14:06    Post subject: Reply with quote

sciotofloods wrote:
I think it's important to note that all of the linked or quoted stories come from Falun Gong publications or fronts.
Not that I'd put it past the Chinese Gov't, but you have to consider the source.


Some of the stories are from the BBC quoting local chinese govt sources claiming that such transplants are NOW banned.
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ramonmercadoOffline
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PostPosted: 07-03-2012 20:22    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
Death-row inmates main source of organs in China: report
http://medicalxpress.com/news/2012-03-death-row-inmates-main-source-china.html
March 7th, 2012 in Other

Executed prisoners were still the main source of organs used in transplant operations in China due to the lack of voluntary donations, a top health official was quoted saying Wednesday.

China has long vowed to reduce its reliance on death-row inmates for organs, but high demand and a chronic shortage of donations meant they remained a key source, the Legal Daily quoted Vice Health Minister Huang Jiefu as saying.

Huang reportedly made the remarks on the sidelines of the country's annual parliamentary session in Beijing where about 3,000 delegates from across the country have gathered for 10 days of meetings.

China banned the trade in human organs in 2007 and two years later began rolling out a nationwide donation system, but demand for organ transplants still far exceeds supply in the country of 1.3 billion people.

About 10,000 transplants are carried out annually, but an estimated 1.3 million people are waiting for transplants, state media said previously, opening the door to the illegal sale of organs and forced donations.

The Chinese Medical Association, an official body representing doctors, said in 2007 that China would no longer transplant organs from executed prisoners except for their immediate relatives, earlier reports said.

In 2009 Huang said the rights of death-row inmates were respected and written consent from prisoners was required before their organs could be harvested, the China Daily said at the time.
But Huang admitted that executed prisoners were "definitely not a proper source for organ transplants".

International human rights groups have long accused China of harvesting organs from executed prisoners for transplant without the consent of the prisoner or their family -- charges the government has denied.
Amnesty International China researcher Sarah Schafer said Huang's latest comments suggested "nothing much has changed".

"We feel that this lack of progress is quite chilling," Schafer told AFP. "There's no way a prisoner facing execution can give meaningful consent."
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ramonmercadoOffline
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PostPosted: 23-03-2012 11:10    Post subject: Reply with quote

Yeah right, heard this before.

Quote:
China to end organ donations from executed prisoners
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-china-17485103

Most of the transplant organs in China come from prisoners on death row

China has pledged to end the practice of taking organs from executed prisoners within the next five years, state media report.

Officials say the country would instead rely on a new national donation system for organ transplants.

Prisoners account for two thirds of China's transplant organs, according to previous estimates from state media.

Human rights groups say death row inmates are pressured to donate organs - China denies such allegations.

Huang Jiefu, vice minister of health, was quoted by state-run agency Xinhua as saying that a trial system for public organ donation has been launched in some areas.

"The pledge to abolish organ donations from condemned prisoners represents the resolve of the government," he said.

He added that organ donations from prisoners were not ideal because infections are usually high, affecting the long-term survival rates of those who undergo the transplants.

Official figures from the health ministry show that about 1.5 million people need transplants, but only 10,000 are performed annually, Xinhua says.

Rights groups estimate that China puts to death thousands of prisoners a year.

Official figures, however, remain a state secret, according to the BBC's Martin Patience in Beijing.

He adds that the country faces a severe shortage of organ donors, partly because many people do not want to donate organs due to the cultural belief of that they should be buried whole.

This has led to a thriving black market. Officials outlawed organ trafficking five years ago, but it still remains a problem.

The Red Cross Society of China has also said that guidelines would be issued regarding financial aid to families of the deceased organ donors to help curb the illegal organ trade.
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ramonmercadoOffline
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PostPosted: 15-07-2013 11:24    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
China ‘murdering Falun Gong members for organ harvesting’
http://www.irishtimes.com/news/china-murdering-falun-gong-members-for-organ-harvesting-1.1459522

Oireachtas joint committee hears that some 65,000 Falun Gong practitioners have been murdered to facilitate organ transplant

Members of the outlawed Falun Gong organisation play instruments during a rally in Hong Kong. Ireland has been urged tolobby the European Union to confront the Chinese authorities more trenchantly over the forced removal of organs Photograph: Daniel J Groshong/Bloomberg

Peter Murtagh

Thu, Jul 11, 2013, 06:46

An estimated 8,000 prisoners of conscience in China have their organs removed forcibly every year to supply a burgeoning transplant market operated by the Chinese military, an Oireachtas joint committee heard yesterday.

Not all of them die but since 2001, some 65,000 Falun Gong practitioners have been murdered to facilitate organ transplant, it was claimed.

The assertions came from David Matas, a Canada-based international human rights lawyer, and Ethan Gutmann, a London-based American journalist who has specialised in investigating unethical organ harvesting in China.

Giving evidence yesterday to the Joint Committee on Foreign Affairs and Trade, they urged Ireland to lobby the European Union to confront the Chinese authorities more trenchantly over the forced removal of organs, both from prisoners sentenced to death and prisoners of conscience, such as Falun Gong, and to enact legislation here to ban organ transplant tourism, as Israel has done.

“It hasn’t stopped the killing [in China],” said Mr Matas, “but it has stopped complicity and it sends a message.”

Mr Gutmann, who has been examining unethical organ harvesting in China for seven years, said there was “no legal way” for practitioners of Falun Gong to be executed. “But it’s a bit like the Inquisition,” he said, “they just disappear.”

Falun Gong is a spiritual discipline based on meditation and is opposed vigorously by the Communist authorities in China.

Mr Gutmann said evidence existed that in some instances, firing squads sought only to wound their victims so organs could be extracted from living tissue. In such cases, the removal of organs was the cause of death rather than execution.

Senator David Norris, who sponsored a motion urging the Government to use international forums to oppose forced organ harvesting in China, said what was happening was “a massive crime against humanity and mass murder”.

He decried a Department of Foreign Affairs briefing paper on the subject which he said saw the issue in terms of trade and referred to “the autonomous region of Tibet”.

His motion was passed unanimously and without a vote.
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gncxxOffline
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PostPosted: 15-07-2013 22:27    Post subject: Reply with quote

Sixty-five thousand people?! That's about two cities' worth! Are they sure about their figures? What a nightmare if they are.
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MonstrosaOffline
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PostPosted: 16-07-2013 07:47    Post subject: Reply with quote

gncxx wrote:
Sixty-five thousand people?! That's about two cities' worth! Are they sure about their figures? What a nightmare if they are.
That's about 6000 people a year.
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ramonmercadoOffline
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PostPosted: 16-07-2013 13:35    Post subject: Reply with quote

gncxx wrote:
Sixty-five thousand people?! That's about two cities' worth! Are they sure about their figures? What a nightmare if they are.


Falun Gong are a Cult but one with millions of members. The figures are plausible in that context especially given the Chinese Governments admission that such organ harvesting took place in the pase.
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