The clock is ticking on Canada’s chance to enact important measures against organ trafficking.
This is a critical moment of decision for Canada.
Live Organs on Demand
Organ trafficking is a global phenomenon. However, forced organ harvesting deserves special attention in the context of the Chinese. In China, this practice is driven by the state.Falun Gong, Uyghurs, Tibetans Targeted
The sudden boom in organ transplantation in China coincides with the start of the eradication campaign against Falun Gong. Since July 1999, Falun Gong practitioners have been incarcerated and tortured in massive numbers. During captivity, Falun Gong adherents have been singled out for organ examinations and blood tests.Canadians Travel to China for Illicit Organs
For the past two decades, Canada, among other developed countries, has been a participant in this abuse. Dr. Jeff Zaltzman, the head of renal transplants at St. Michael’s Hospital in Toronto, revealed in 2014 that he alone had at least 50 patients who had gone to China for transplants. Zaltzman has since advocated for changing legislation to address the issue of forced organ harvesting.An Extraterritorial Offence
Bill S-240 recognizes the extraterritorial nature of organ transplant abuse. By making it an extraterritorial offence to purchase organs and obtain organs without donors’ informed consent, the bill creates important measures to stem the flow of organ tourism to countries such as China.
“The Tribunal’s members are all certain—unanimously, and sure beyond reasonable doubt—that in China forced organ harvesting from prisoners of conscience has been practised for a substantial period of time involving a very substantial number of victims.”The final judgment is due to be released on June 17.
China Plans Globalization of Mass Murder
China has further ambitions to develop organ transplantation into an export industry as part of China’s “Belt and Road” initiative.The industrialization and globalization of organ transplantation is the industrialization and globalization of mass murder. If this practice is allowed to take root in human societies, ever more vulnerable populations would be sacrificed in the pursuit of a healthy life by the powerful and the rich.
The cost of inaction means a continuation of Canadian complicity in one of the worst crimes of our times. It is vital that Canada passes this legislation before the end of this parliamentary session, bringing this complicity to an end.
