Human rights experts said that naming and shaming China’s ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP) would be the best strategy for confronting its horrific practices of harvesting organs from prisoners of conscience.
During a panel discussion on the forum’s second day, Katrina Lantos Swett, president of the Lantos Foundation for Human Rights and Justice, said it is important to put “unrelenting pressure” on the CCP and “raise the level of horror and shock and outrage at what this criminal CCP is doing to innocent human beings.”
Swett suggested that concerned parties resort to “shaming, blaming, and naming the atrocities committed by offending governments.”
She explained that such a strategy would work because the CCP didn’t want people to know about the crime, aware of the moral revulsion it would provoke.
“We know that the CCP realizes how shameful and repulsive and disgusting to any normal human being their program of forced organ harvesting is, and the reason we know it is they’re lying about it,” Swett said.
“How do we weaponize China’s own pride and very thin-skinned unwillingness to be shamed on the international stage?” Swett said. “How do we weaponize that to make this a crisis for them, and hopefully a crisis internally, as this issue rises in familiarity and awareness and outrage around the world.”
Naming and shaming would be more effective than pursuing the issue through “dry legal mechanisms” or United Nations mechanisms, Swett said, adding, “It’s through shaming them with the reality of their own deeds.”
Falun Gong Protection Act
One concrete way to advance such a naming-and-shaming strategy is by helping push the Falun Gong Protection Act into law, according to Jan Jekielek, senior editor with The Epoch Times and host of EpochTV’s “American Thought Leaders” program.“Certainly the Chinese Communist Party is working very, very hard to prevent the Falun Gong Protection Act from being passed, because then it will become law that the CCP is doing this, that that is a very powerful message,” Jekielek said during the panel discussion.

It would also require the United States to make it a policy to avoid working with China on organ transplantation while the CCP is in power.
The Senate version of the legislation (S.817) is currently before the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations.
“We believe that the CCP cannot survive if forced organ harvesting is clearly exposed and the U.S. no longer supports this egregious crime against humanity,” DAFOH wrote.
Sir Geoffrey Nice, who chaired the tribunal, addressed its 2020 findings during the panel discussion.
“We applied the strictest test of factual finding—proof beyond reasonable doubt. We found facts; we applied the law; we came to conclusions, and those conclusions were of crimes against humanity and torture,” Nice said.
Falun Gong, also known as Falun Dafa, is a spiritual discipline rooted in the principles of truthfulness, compassion, and tolerance. Introduced to the public in China in 1992, the practice rapidly expanded its reach through word of mouth, reaching about 70 million to 100 million people by official estimates, before the CCP deemed it a threat and launched a violent campaign to eradicate the group in China in 1999, as well as a vilification campaign to justify its actions—some of which spilled into Western media narratives.
The campaigns continue to this day, with many practitioners imprisoned in detention facilities, labor camps, and brainwashing centers, where forced labor, torture, and deaths have been widely reported.
Cornelia Kaminski, federal chairwoman of Aktion Lebensrecht für Alle, said at the panel discussion that defending human rights is especially important to protect the vulnerable against those in power.
“The European Union should start trying to think of their own Falun Gong Protection Act,” Kaminski said.







