The Daily Telegraph

Is British science aiding and abetting the Chinese human organ trade?

Some Western academics and experts suspect they unwittingl­y trained medics from China responsibl­e for the gruesome trade of forced organ harvesting. Henry Bodkin reports

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Between March 2005 and September 2006 Annie Yang was tortured for up to 20 hours a day in a labour camp outside Beijing for her devotion to Falun Gong spirituali­sm.

The abuse was relentless.

But every few weeks something strange would happen.

She and her fellow captives would be herded onto a prison bus with the curtains drawn and driven to a nearby police hospital.

There they underwent a comprehens­ive series of medical examinatio­ns: scans, blood tests, X-rays, you name it.

The traumatise­d women were baffled.

Why was a regime that so wantonly tortured them also apparently concerned for their underlying health?

It was only when Ms Yang, an antiques trader, fled to the UK after being temporaril­y released from the camp that the gruesome penny dropped.

“I was shown reports on organ harvesting and realised that was the reason for the scans,” she told The Daily Telegraph.

“My whole body was trembling – I could have been one of them.”

Now 59 and making a living as a freelance translator in London, Ms Yang has no idea how many, if any, of her fellow inmates are still alive.

What has become all but certain in the intervenin­g years, however, is the existence of a state-sponsored system of forced organ transplant­ation in the country of her birth.

Two years ago Ms Yang gave evidence to an independen­t tribunal chaired by Sir Geoffrey Nice QC, the former lead prosecutor against Slobodan Milošević, which concluded that Falun Gong practition­ers were serving as the principal source for a system of forced organ harvesting in the People’s Republic of China.

Among the plethora of fellow witnesses was Dr Enver Tohti, a former surgeon – now an Uber driver in London – who spoke of being ordered to “cut deep and work fast” by removing the organs of political prisoners while they were still alive.

The findings were largely corroborat­ed a year later by no fewer than eight UN special rapporteur­s, who described “credible indicators of forced organ harvesting”.

In plain language, victims are killed to order, their bodies sliced open for their livers, hearts, kidneys and lungs, even their corneas.

The organs are then sold on a fearsomely lucrative internatio­nal market.

Kidneys go for anywhere between $50,000 and $120,000, and pancreases between $110,000 and $140,000.

Experts believe the Chinese Communist Party is also increasing­ly willing to allow scientific experiment­s on unconsenti­ng political prisoners, in an echo of the very darkest practices of Nazi concentrat­ion camps.

Awareness is – finally, campaigner­s would say – seeping into the corridors of power in the West.

Last month, for example, a government Bill was passed banning British citizens from travelling overseas to purchase an organ.

Accompanyi­ng this awareness is a growing unease in Western academia.

Eminent medics are starting to look back uncomforta­bly on decades of “constructi­ve engagement” with the Chinese medical establishm­ent – those all-expenses-paid trips to lecture budding surgeons, and the profitable arrangemen­ts to train batches of them in the West.

Meanwhile editors of academic journals are scouring their back issues for too-good-to-be-true studies on organ transplant­s, that may in fact have arisen from experiment­ation on human guinea pigs in places such as Xinjiang.

In October last year a worldrenow­ned Australian transplant doctor, Professor Russell Strong, called on all Chinese surgeons to be banned from Western hospitals to prevent them using the skills they pick up there in the organ harvesting market.

Now, a leading human rights body has warned medical equipment manufactur­ers – amongst others – that they might be prosecuted if their kit is found to be used in the illegal Chinese trade.

All this implies a disturbing question.

Namely, has the West aided and abetted China’s organ harvesting industry?

Or, in more human terms, if Annie Yang had stuck around in Beijing to have her living heart cut out, might that surgeon have received relevant training from a British university, or even the NHS?

To understand what drives all this, you need only appreciate the single, simple fact that global demand for organs vastly outstrips legitimate supply.

Professor Martin Elliott, who led the transplant team at London’s Great Ormond Street Hospital for 10 years, puts it bluntly.

“The punters are desperate,” he said. “Remember, if you’re on a waiting list for a transplant, about 25 to 30 per cent will die on that waiting list.

“It’s not surprising that they’re going to be looking around for an organ, and they will grab what they can find. I find it quite hard to blame them.”

The resulting market in organ tourism is thought to be worth up to $1.7billion a year.

One Japanese woman – an extreme case – is reputed to have coughed up $5million for a liver.

Transplant “agents” are available in many countries; for a fee they can fix you up with a matched organ in a fraction of the time you would spend on a waiting list.

For a while, health insurance companies in Israel were even offering to help clients find such agents in China.

The incentives, then, are obvious. What is less clear to the casual observer is how in a couple of short decades China managed to become the organ transplant centre of the world.

Wayne Jordash QC is the founder of Global Rights Compliance, a not-forsaturda­y profit initiative specialisi­ng in internatio­nal humanitari­an and criminal law.

He explained China’s rapid progress in a chilling legal advisory note published in April.

“At the beginning of the 2000s the PRC leapt from a follower to a leader of transplant­ation technology,” it read.

“Despite the absence of a voluntary donation system, the organ transplant­ation hospitals in the PRC tripled within four years, and transplant­ation surgery, previously conducted nearly exclusivel­y with kidneys, expanded rapidly to surgeries involving hearts, lungs and livers.”

The volume of kidney transplant­s grew 510 per cent, liver transplant­s 1,820 per cent, heart transplant­s 1,100 per cent and lung transplant­s 2,450 per cent.

“Simultaneo­usly, transplant tourists and Chinese citizens were reported to have access to a matched organ within weeks or months, in comparison to other countries where patients could be on a transplant waiting list for years despite well-establishe­d donation systems,” the note said.

“The transplant­ations were also able to be planned in advance, with specific dates of organ availabili­ty provided to the recipient ahead of time.

“This pre-arrangemen­t stands in stark contrast to a normal organmatch­ing process between a deceased donor and a recipient that takes place once the donor is determined as deceased and cannot be planned in advance of the death of the donor.”

So, where was this magical supply of organs coming from?

In 2009, Beijing said that two-thirds of organs used for transplant­ations were taken from death row prisoners, stating that these prisoners granted consent before being executed.

But that simply didn’t stack up. From 2000, the number of executions following a death penalty sentence declined, while the transplant­ation system grew exponentia­lly.

Among those in the West, suspicion soon fell on the CCP’S ruthless campaign of oppression against followers of Falun Gong, a movement rooted in traditiona­l Buddhist and Daoist teaching that became increasing­ly popular from the 1990s.

It was banned in 1999, partly, some believe, because the CCP got spooked when the number of practition­ers exceeded the party membership. Mass arrests followed.

Since then the number of Falun Gong practition­ers who have fallen victim to forced organ harvesting are, conservati­vely, estimated to amount to hundreds of thousands.

According to Sir Geoffrey Nice’s China Tribunal, 60,000 to 100,000 transplant­ations took place annually between 2000 and 2014, with Falun Gong practition­ers serving as the principal source.

In 2010, China said that from 2015 organ procuremen­t from executed prisoners would end and the system would rely on voluntary donation.

But experts don’t believe that for a minute.

They point out that the number of organs used in China for

‘The punters are desperate; about 25-30pc of people on a transplant waiting list will die’ Professor Martin Elliott

transplant­ations greatly outstrips the number that could ever be garnered from voluntary donation.

The Uyghur Turkic-speaking Muslim minority, who since 2017 have been subject to repression so brutal that both the US government and UK Parliament describe it as genocide, are feared to be a new source of forced organs.

Only this week, thousands of damning undercover photograph­s from the heart of Xinjiang’s mass incarcerat­ion complex were published, proving the depths of Beijing’s hatred for these benighted people.

It followed evidence presented to the US congress this month of analysis indicating that anywhere between 25,000 and 50,000 detainees of the camps are subjected to organ harvesting and then cremated each year.

Uyghurs are also believed to be the victims of wholesale illegal experiment­ation.

Professor Elliott, who sat on the panel of the 2020 China Tribunal, said: “The evidence is overwhelmi­ng.

“What happens to those people in the camps is brutal and involves extreme torture and the denigratio­n of human life.”

Using force to remove an organ from an unconsenti­ng person, often without anaestheti­c, is at the most extreme end of what Professor Elliott terms the “spectrum of evil”.

But it is not the only type of coercion.

Poverty and desperatio­n are also potent factors in supplying the organ trade, and not just in China.

According to Global Rights Compliance, the average donor is 29 years old and earning an income of around $480 a year, while the typical (male) recipient is 48 years old and earning approximat­ely $53,000 a year.

“The amount of the payment can be considered coercive in the context of the vendor’s financial vulnerabil­ity and undermines the principle of voluntary consent that is central to ethical transplant­ation,” they said.

Or as Wayne Jordash put it with lawyerly understate­ment: “There is a huge amount of unethical conduct.”

Since 2020 this “unethical conduct” has been establishe­d, in the view of the tribunal, beyond reasonable doubt.

But for Mr Jordash and his fellow campaigner­s, the real question now is this: to what extent have we in the West enabled it?

Professor Elliott is rueful. “The embarrassi­ng thing was that although I’d spent all my life in transplant­ation, I was completely unaware of such activities, which is itself an issue,” he said.

“Communicat­ion between physicians, within and between countries, has fostered all sorts of research and benefits – I personally have benefited and my field has benefited from them.”

But here comes the rub.

“You are often invited there [China], maybe to give a lecture, maybe to do some teaching, maybe to operate, and you only see this narrow piece of what you are allowed to view.”

It wasn’t just him.

In recent decades British medical and academic institutio­ns, warmly encouraged by the Government, have been only too eager to share their skills with China.

They have done so under the dictum of “dialogue” – but there’s good money to be made, too.

“It’s important to know many organisati­ons, often with good intentions, make money and obtain benefit from relationsh­ips with reciprocal sources in states such as China,” said Professor Elliott.

Take Healthcare UK, a joint initiative between the Department for Internatio­nal Trade, NHS England and the Department of Health, to promote the export of British health services.

Under an arrangemen­t signed in 2013 with the Internatio­nal Health Exchange Centre of China, Britain would make available arguably its four finest medical universiti­es – Oxford, Cambridge, Imperial and UCL – to offer training and assessment for Chinese surgeons.

The agreement also enthusiast­ically promotes “the UK’S extensive medical equipment supply chain”.

In a sentence which would no doubt chill Annie Yang to the bone, it specifical­ly mentions scanners.

The pact lauded the work of the Royal College of Surgeons of England in China, citing the quality assurance and accreditat­ion programmes that Chinese institutio­ns might like to sign up to.

That 2013 iteration of the deal was withdrawn in May 2019.

However, just last November a joint statement between Sajid Javid, the current Health Secretary, and his Chinese opposite number agreed to continue to “work together on medical education and training”.

In response to the concerns raised, a government spokesman said simply: “We do not provide training or support for organ transplant­s in China.”

Meanwhile the Royal College of Surgeons of England denied accreditin­g any training in China “that involves organ removal or transplant­ation”.

However, it was ambiguous in its response as to whether any practical training that could be relevant to transplant­ation has been offered either in the UK or China.

“This is an issue we take very seriously,” a spokesman said. “The practice of forced harvesting is entirely at odds with the ethical code and our approach to training, which stresses the importance of consent, and good ethical practice.”

Even if no direct transplant­ation training is or ever was offered – both organisati­ons phrased their responses firmly in the present tense – is any collaborat­ion acceptable with a medical system linked to organ harvesting?

And do such collaborat­ions risk appearing to bestow a Western seal of quality on doctors or institutio­ns which may be involved in pure evil?

Professor Elliott said: “The organisati­ons which deal with them [the Chinese] must realise, as we stated at the end of the tribunal, that they are interactin­g, as far as we were able to decide, with a criminal state.

“Lots of Chinese doctors have come over here, plus the US and Australia. One doesn’t know how it is being applied when they go back.”

What, then, is to be done? The British Medical Associatio­n has stuck its neck out and publicly demanded the World Health Organisati­on commission an independen­t inquiry into China’s organ harvesting.

Dr Julian Sheather, the BMA’S special adviser in ethics and human rights, said: “There is absolutely no doubt that these activities are a travesty of the moral obligation­s in medicine.”

But note the BMA’S wording: “independen­t”.

“It’s true to say about the World Health Organisati­on that China is extremely influentia­l in it,” said Dr Sheather.

“My strong sense is that it is a political organisati­on, and there is a great deal of lobbying and political relationsh­ips which mean we would like to see a report by an independen­t organisati­on.”

Given the fiasco of its Covid inquiry, does anyone truly expect the WHO to blow the whistle on arguably its most powerful member?

In lieu of any official supranatio­nal condemnati­on, campaigner­s are hoping the law could act as a deterrent against even unwitting complicity in organ harvesting by Western companies and institutio­ns.

The legal doctrine of aiding and abetting is one such possible avenue that could be particular­ly dangerous for medical device manufactur­ers.

It was used in 1946 to convict the general manager of Tesch & Stabenow, the manufactur­er of Zyklon B poison gas, for complicity in the Holocaust.

More recent cases against French and Swedish companies have demonstrat­ed modern prosecutor­s’ willingnes­s to use it.

Under this scenario, it’s conceivabl­e that the boss of a British manufactur­er could find himself in the dock, if his equipment was found to be used in illegal organ transplant­ation.

But not, potentiall­y, if he could demonstrat­e that he had undertaken due diligence before selling it abroad. And that is the crucial point. Given the complete lack of transparen­cy in China’s medical system, the state-imposed murkiness of it, could a Western firm ever be confident that a diagnostic machine or surgical device would not be put to use for organ harvesting?

“If they cannot satisfy themselves that their equipment is not being used in that way, they need to ask themselves serious questions about whether they should be in that market,” said Dr Sheather.

Perhaps the threat of a PR disaster is at least as big a deterrent as the law, or as Mr Jordash puts it: “The bottom line needs to be hit.”

But he, Dr Sheather and Professor Elliott are hoping for a broader change of feeling in the West.

“We had this starry idea in the 90s… that if the West engaged with China, then, a bit like trickle-down economics, somehow China would become a sort of vibrant democratic space,” he said.

“We did the same with Russia and look where we are.”

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 ?? ?? President of the People’s Republic of China Xi Jinping, above; Uyghurs detained by police, far left; transplant expert Professor Martin Elliott, below
President of the People’s Republic of China Xi Jinping, above; Uyghurs detained by police, far left; transplant expert Professor Martin Elliott, below

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