New evidence of organ harvesting in China points out the failures of leading media in covering this story.
New evidence of the Chinese regime’s practice of harvesting organs from Falun Gong practitioners has come to light through the admission of a Chinese doctor.
The music of the Celestial Marching Band makes its way through London's heaving streets.
Two years ago, a groundbreaking investigative report by two high-profile Canadian lawyers raised the horrific possibility that tens of thousands of prisoners of conscience in China were being killed so their organs could be sold in lucrative transplant deals.
In a 2008 United Nations report, Asma Jahangir Jahangir, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Religion or Belief, and Manfred Nowak, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Torture, demanded that China explain the dramatic increase in organs used for transplantation from 2000 to 2005, and the mismatch between the high number of transplants and the relatively few known donor sources.
China's Human Rights & Democracy Information Center in Hong Kong reported today that two death row inmates from Xinjiang, China had their organs removed by authorities before the execution, to be transplanted for profit. Family members of the prisoners who attempted to petition in Beijing were prevented from going by authorities in Xinjiang, who didn't want the family disturbing the preparations for the 2008 Beijing Olympics.
China's Human Rights & Democracy Information Center in Hong Kong reported today that two death row inmates from Xinjiang, China had their organs removed by authorities before the execution, to be transplanted for profit. Family members of the prisoners who attempted to petition in Beijing were prevented from going by authorities in Xinjiang, who didn't want the family disturbing the preparations for the 2008 Beijing Olympics.
In early 2006, The Epoch Times first exposed the Chinese Communist Party's crime of harvesting organs from live Falun Gong practitioners. Since then new evidence continues to surface.
The Olympic Games were first held in Greece, the birthplace of democracy, and from the beginning have carried the message that nations should gather in peace and compete in sports. There is an inherent kinship between the peaceful Olympic Games and the peaceful ways of democratic and free nations, and the Olympics have had their finest moments when hosted by democratic countries.