World Uyghur Congress President Sounds Alarm Over Organ Harvesting in China

Frank Fang
By Frank Fang
December 21, 2017China News
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World Uyghur Congress President Sounds Alarm Over Organ Harvesting in China
Uyghur children play while a local police officer looks on, in Kashgar, Xinjiang on June 29, 2017. Xinjiang is located in China's far northwest. (Kevin Frayer/Getty Images)

The increasing suppression and surveillance faced by the Uyghur minority in China may include a deadly element: systematic, forced organ harvesting.

Speaking at the United Kingdom Parliament on Dec. 13, Dolkun Isa, president of the World Uyghur Congress, an international organization for exiled Uyghurs, raised concerns that the Chinese regime may be targeting Uyghurs for organ harvesting and trafficking.

“We are also deeply disturbed by reports of the Chinese authorities collecting blood samples from the Uyghur population in East Turkestan,” said Isa at a roundtable discussion on organ harvesting in China, according to the World Uyghur Congress website. East Turkestan is the name used by Uyghurs who support self-determination for their homeland, which is located in Xinjiang in China’s far northwest.

Blood Samples

On Dec. 13, Human Rights Watch reported that Chinese authorities in Xinjiang had begun collecting DNA samples, fingerprints, iris scans, and blood samples from local residents between the ages of 12 and 65, under the guise of a public health program.

“On the one hand, collecting blood samples allows the Chinese government to establish a genetic database of the Uyghur people to further monitor, control, and repress them,” Isa said.

“This genetic information also facilitates organ harvesting, making it easier to compare blood types and compatibility of potential Uyghur victims,” he added.

NTD Photo
Dolkun Isa of the World Uyghur Congress, during an interview in Tokyo, Japan on May 2, 2008. (Yoshikazu Tsuno/AFP/Getty Images)

Isa’s warning comes two months after the Chinese regime’s mouthpiece China News Service (CNS) revealed that China Southern Airlines had opened an express lane in May 2016 for transporting human organs to and from Xinjiang for use in transplant surgery.

Uyghurs have long endured repression at the hands of the Chinese regime aimed at stamping out their religion, culture, and language. The increased activity associated with organ harvesting occurs during a time of a heightened crackdown involving increased surveillance and suppression, motivated by fears of a growing Uyghur separatist movement.

Living Organ Bank

The news from Xinjiang, according to Wang Zhiyuan, spokesperson for the World Organization to Investigate the Persecution of Falun Gong (WOIPFG), is another sign that “the dark secrets of organ transplants have yet to be fully exposed.”

WOIPFG, through its own investigation, has found that prisoners of conscience are the source for China’s state-run organ bank—prisoners who have their organs harvested against their will for people in need of transplants, killing them in the process. Most victims of forced organ harvesting have been adherents of the Falun Gong spiritual discipline, heavily persecuted by the Chinese regime, but the victims have also included Tibetans and Uyghurs.

NTD Photo
Uyghur men at a local market in Kashgar, Xinjiang on July 1, 2017. (Kevin Frayer/Getty Images)

While being held in prison or detention, prisoners are often subjected to systematic blood checks, for the purpose of checking their compatibility for organ transplant surgery, according to Bloody Harvest,” a comprehensive investigative report by human rights lawyer David Matas and former Canadian Secretary of State (Asia-Pacific) David Kilgour.

China’s transplant industry has skyrocketed since former Party leader Jiang Zemin launched a nationwide persecution of Falun Gong practitioners in 1999, as millions of practitioners have been arrested and sentenced to prison, according to the official press office for Falun Gong, the Falun Dafa Information Center.

In June 2016, the U.S. House of Representatives unanimously passed H.Res.343, a resolution condemning organ harvesting of Falun Gong practitioners in China.

Students Disappear

In recent months, media have also reported cases of missing Uyghurs who have disappeared without a trace. “Most recently, this was the case with 23 Uyghur students, who were returned to China from Egypt and have since disappeared. We have strong reason to believe that many of those who have disappeared have died in Chinese custody and have had their organs harvested and sold,” said Isa.

According to a Dec. 17 report by The Associated Press, Egypt had been a longtime sanctuary for Uyghurs to study Islam, before the country began deporting Uyghurs back to China recently. AP reported that a young man from Korla City in Xinjiang, had gone missing after being taken away by Chinese authorities in February 2017. He had studied at the Al Azhar University in Cairo but returned to China in 2016. A teacher and three students in Cairo said they heard from sources in China that he might have died in detention.

Chinese paramilitary police officers stand guard along a street in Urumqi on May 23, 2014. Xiu Hui, the head of security bureau, labor camp and prison in Xinjiang, was placed under investigation in January 2016. (Goh Chai Hin/AFP/Getty Images)
Chinese paramilitary police officers stand guard along a street in Urumqi, Xinjiang on May 23, 2014. (Goh Chai Hin/AFP/Getty Images)

Radio Free Asia (RFA) reported on Dec. 14 that nearly 10 percent of residents at the Bullaqsu township in Xinjiang have been detained by Chinese authorities this year.

“Groups of people have been arrested and sent to detention centers every week,” wrote a former resident of Bullaqsu in a letter to RFA, who now lives in exile.

According to AP, thousands of people have, since the beginning of the year, been rounded up by Chinese authorities and placed into secretive detentions camps in Xinjiang, for alleged crimes such as having extremist thoughts or traveling abroad.

The camps are set up for the purpose of indoctrinating Uyghurs with “Mandarin, law, ethnic unity, de-radicalization, and patriotism,” according to a memo from the Xinjiang human resources office. The concerns raised by Isa suggest these camps may also have a more dire purpose.

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