Thưa Bà Con,
Dưới đây là bài tường
thuật tên Epoch Time ngày 25/2, một ngày sau Hội Thảo quốc tế về “HỘI THẢO VỀ
VIỆC ĐCSTQ CƯỠNG CHIẾM NỘI TẠNG”. Xin góp ý thêm
Phát biểu của Ms Kristina
Olney, Director of government relations for Washington-based nonprofit Victims
of Communism Memorial Foundation, có nêu ra một điều trong nhiều “remarks” của Cô
là (tóm tắt của người tham dự):”Cần nêu lưu ý đến những quốc gia thân thiện với
TC, và những quốc gia “lệ thuộc” vào TC trong việc cưỡng chiếm nội tạng nầy”.
Xin được bàn, có lẽ Cô muốn nói đến Việt Nam. Vì Việt Nam là một nước xem như hoàn
toàn lệ thuộc vào TC do sự “thuần phục” của Bộ Chính trị VN, đứng đầu là Nguyễn
Phú Trọng. Trong những năm gần đây, nhiều thiếu nữ và trẻ em bị mất tích thình
lình (CSBV không điều tra) nhứt là tại Đồng Bằng Sông Cửu Long. Dĩ nhiên là chúng
ta đã biết các em đã được mang qua Cambodia là “nô lệ tình dục”, nhưng có một số
không nhỏ bị “cướp lấy nội tạng” để cho TC kinh doanh thị trường …cấy ghép nội
tạng trên khắp thế giới ở Tàu! Đây là một tội ác diệt chủng cũng cần nên lưu ý.
(Đây là góp ý của Tôi, một thành viên trong Ban Tổ chức).
***
Countries Should Do
More to End China’s ‘Horrific’ Forced Organ Harvesting: Experts
USFrank Fang Feb 25,
2021ShareFacebookTwitterCopy Link
Fig1: Chinese doctors carry
fresh organs for transplant in 2012. (Screenshot/Sohu.com)
A group of international
advocates are calling on countries including the United States to do more to
hold China accountable for its state-sanctioned practice of harvesting organs
from living prisoners of conscience.
“On the issue of forced organ
harvesting, the international community has remained silent despite the
evidence for far too long,” said Kristina Olney, director of government
relations for the Washington-based nonprofit Victims of Communism Memorial
Foundation (VOC) during a webinar held on Feb. 24.
The online event was co-hosted
by VOC and the International Coalition to End Transplant Abuse in China (ETAC),
which is an advocacy group consisting of lawyers, academics, medical
professionals, researchers, and human rights advocates.
Olney added: “The United
States and the rights-respecting nations of the world must confront the evidence
of this horrific human rights abuse taking place in China today, and hold the
Chinese Communist Party accountable for its complicity. This crime has no place
in the 21st century.”
Kristina Olney
Gig 2: Kristina Olney (2nd
from the top R), director of government relations for Washington-based
nonprofit Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation, speaks during a webinar on
Feb. 24, 2021. (Screenshot/NTD Television)
China has been one of the top
destinations for transplant tourism, while Beijing has promoted a narrative in
U.S. newspapers that organs are sourced from voluntary donations. The Chinese
regime announced that it would stop sourcing organs from executed prisoners
starting on Jan. 1, 2015, and claimed that it would executively rely on a new
system of voluntary donations.
Beijing’s claim was refuted by
a June 2019 report published by a London-based people’s tribunal headed by U.N.
war crimes prosecutor Sir Geoffrey Nice QC. The report concluded, after a
year-long investigation, that the stated-sanctioned practice of forced organ
harvesting for profit was happening on a “significant scale” in China, with
Falun Gong practitioners being the main source of organs.
In China, adherents of Falun
Gong, a spiritual discipline also known as Falun Dafa, have been the targets of
persecution by the CCP since July 1999. According to estimates from the Falun
Dafa Information Center, millions of Falun Gong practitioners have been throw
into prisons, psychiatric wards, and other facilities, while hundreds of
thousands have suffered torture.
Fig 3: Police detain a Falun
Gong protester
Police detain a Falun Gong
protester in Tiananmen Square as a crowd watches in Beijing on Oct. 1, 2000
photo. (Chien-min Chung/AP Photo)
Fig 4: Falun Gong
practitioners take part in a candlelight vigil commemorating the 20th
anniversary of the persecution of Falun Gong in China on the West Lawn of
Capitol Hill on July 18, 2019. (Samira Bouaou/The Epoch Times)
Allegations of forced organ
harvesting from detained Falun Gong adherents emerged around 2006.
“There have been a number of
congressional hearings and resolutions condemning forced organ harvesting, but
until now, there has been no comprehensive legislation signed into law
requiring the U.S. government to address this issue,” Olney said.
This year, three different
counties in the state of Virginia passed resolutions condemning China’s forced
organ harvesting.
Olney applauded U.S. lawmakers
for introducing the Stop Forced Organ Harvesting (STOP) Act in December last
year, calling the bill “one of the most comprehensive legislative initiatives
ever introduced on the issue of organ trafficking.” She added that the bill
will be re-introduced in both the Senate and House next week.
The Senate bill (S.5016) was
introduced by Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) on Dec. 15 last year. On the same day,
Rep. Chris Smith (R-N.J) and Thomas Suozzi (D-N.Y.) introduced the House
version (H.R.8972).
Under the proposed
legislation, the president would be empowered to impose sanctions on foreign
officials and entities that engage in or support the forced removal of vital
organs from unwilling victims.
“We urge the U.S. Congress to
swiftly enact this bill, and for international governments to pass similar
legislation,” Olney stated.
Aside from Olney, other
participants in the webinar included Ethan Gutmann, a China studies fellow at
the VOC and co-founder of ETAC, Sean Lin, communications director for the Falun
Dafa Association in Washington; and Sir Nice—a prosecutor at the International
Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia.
Lin said that forced organ
harvesting was more than about medical ethics issues in China’s transplant
industry. He urged the international community to confront the CCP’s human
rights and other violations directly.
“If you do not deal with the
Chinese Communist Party directly, the rampant forced organ harvesting in China
won’t stop,” Lin explained.
Sir Nice explained that the
tribunal reviewed “nothing but evidence” and came to the conclusion that China
has committed crimes against humanity with its practice of forced organ
harvesting.
Fig 5: Sir-Geoffrey-Nice
Sir Geoffrey Nice QC, chair of
the China Tribunal into forced organ harvesting on the first day of public
hearings in London on Dec. 8, 2018. (Justin Palmer)
Also taking part in the
webinar was Wendy Rogers, a professor of clinical ethics at Macquarie
University in Australia. She called for collaboration since no single
individual or institution could force China to end its practice.
“But acting together, professionals
and institutions can exert significant pressure on China,” Rogers explained,
adding that their actions “will send a strong message that the rest of the
world will not tolerate this atrocity.”
Ivan Vilibor Sinčić, a
Croatian politician and member of the European Parliament, said at the webinar
that the European Union has been “afraid of criticizing” China because of
economic interests.
On Dec. 30 last year, the
European Union and China inked a comprehensive business investment deal.
Critics have condemned the agreement—which has yet to be ratified by the
European Parliament or approved by the EU Council—over China’s continued human
rights abuses and poor labor conditions.
“People’s lives must be put
first. It’s time to stop fearing the Chinese economic power. Europe must take a
strong position. And of course, the world must take a strong position on this
issue,” Sinčić said.
From The Epoch Times
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