For the last 16 years, Falun Gong practitioners have been working tirelessly to educate the public on the atrocities perpetrated by the Chinese regime.
David Matas gave his remarks and update on the killing of Falun Gong practitioners for their organs by the Chinese regime, in a public forum at the University of South Australia.
Taiwan amends its organ transplantation law to criminalize transplant tourism, a move which could have an effect on illegal trafficking in China.
Police are believed to be doing the testing in order to expand the list of potential donors whose organs may be taken for forced harvesting.
An official European representative body has promulgated a new convention outlawing the trafficking in human organs, calling on all countries to become signatories to it and criminalize the practice and punish offenders.
Until some point in May it was possible to easily arrange an organ transplant from China on the Internet.
There has been no decrease in the number of transplants, and no other explanation of sources offered by the Chinese authorities despite numerous requests from the United Nations and others.
A lawmaker in a state of Australia has moved to criminalize the receipt of trafficked organs, a development that is seen to have implications for the Chinese regime.
For the last 16 years, Falun Gong practitioners have been working tirelessly to educate the public on the atrocities perpetrated by the Chinese regime.
David Matas gave his remarks and update on the killing of Falun Gong practitioners for their organs by the Chinese regime, in a public forum at the University of South Australia.
Taiwan amends its organ transplantation law to criminalize transplant tourism, a move which could have an effect on illegal trafficking in China.
Police are believed to be doing the testing in order to expand the list of potential donors whose organs may be taken for forced harvesting.
An official European representative body has promulgated a new convention outlawing the trafficking in human organs, calling on all countries to become signatories to it and criminalize the practice and punish offenders.
Until some point in May it was possible to easily arrange an organ transplant from China on the Internet.
There has been no decrease in the number of transplants, and no other explanation of sources offered by the Chinese authorities despite numerous requests from the United Nations and others.
A lawmaker in a state of Australia has moved to criminalize the receipt of trafficked organs, a development that is seen to have implications for the Chinese regime.