Showing posts with label secrets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label secrets. Show all posts

Chilling Chinese "Charity"





Nancy Morgan
RightBias.com
August 9, 2008


China's Dirty Little Secret

The eyes of the world are upon Beijing. Images pour forth daily of new stadiums full of cheering fans, Olympic athletes giving their all and dazzling fireworks in a bustling modern city. The last thing spectators think of as they sit in the new stadiums in Beijing, are the barbaric practises of their hosts. Namely, the lucrative Chinese practise of harvesting and selling the body parts of executed prisoners.

I have images also. The images I have, obtained by Chinese dissident Harry Wu, show a stadium in the countryside, filled to capacity with Chinese citizens. On the stage are a dozen hapless Chinese citizens who have been accused of a crime.

Military officials of the People's Republic of China point out their various crimes and then pronounce sentence. The majority receive a death sentence.

The condemned are led to waiting trucks. A rope is secured around the throats of these prisoners to cut off any last minute statements as they are ferried a short distance to the execution fields. Crowds await, as schools and businesses have closed for the occasion. Attendance is mandatory.

Prisoners are made to kneel. Each prisoner has two guards, one to position the rifle and another standing by. Upon command, a dozen shots ring out and a dozen bodies slump to the ground.

Officials wearing rubber boots stomp on some of the bodies to assure death. Then, all the bodies are collected and taken to the waiting, unmarked white vans. Inside the vans, the kidneys of these prisoners are extracted. Sometimes livers and corneas are harvested also. The vans then travel ten miles to Huaxi University of Medical Sciences in Chengdu, where six patients are prepped and ready to receive these organs into their own bodies.

The Chinese describe this practise as "charity." In Zhenhzou City, a hospital worker who had many times extracted organs at execution sites, said, "A shot in the head, blow away his brain, and the guy is dead. He has no more thinking, ceases to be a human being, just a thing, and we use the waste."

Chinese dissident Harry Wu spent 19 years in a Chinese logai, a prison patterned after the infamous gulags of the former Soviet Union. Upon his release and subsequent settlement in California, Wu traveled back to China several times under an assumed name, carrying a concealed videocam. The images he obtained prove, without a doubt, that China has been engaged in the wholesale trafficking of organs obtained from executed prisoners since, at least 1994.

I produced a film with Harry Wu using this footage. Entitled 'Communist Charity,' it shows an interview with a Chinese doctor making a sales pitch to someone he thought was a prospective organ buyer (Harry Wu). "The quality of our kidneys is better than America," he said, "because we remove the kidneys fast and at the appropriate time. We can guarantee several kidneys in one month. The distance where we remove the kidney and transplant is short. We can do it in, oh, less than 10 hours. In America, it takes more than 20 hours." A sales office in Hong Kong actually provides brochures for those shopping for a new organ.

A Chinese doctor currently residing in Germany was filmed confessing to harvesting the kidney of a patient the night before the execution.

According to Wu, there are 90 hospitals in China capable of performing kidney and cornea transplants. The going price for kidneys in the 1990's was $30,000. Prices have since risen dramatically.

The South China Morning Post reported on Jan. 9, 2000, "Organs from executed prisoners are being offered for up to $300,000 each to Hong Kong liver transplant patients who travel to a mainland hospital." A doctor at Sun Yat Sen University of Medical Sciences in Chengdu told the Post, "The organs are of good quality as they come from executed prisoners."

T. Kumar of Amnesty International testified on this issue at a 1998 hearing before the House Reform and Oversight Committee. "Amnesty International reported on this practise in 1993 and called for China to ban this practise. However the use of organs from this source continues in China, reportedly on a widespread scale." Kumar confirmed that "90% of organs used for transplant in China come from condemned prisoners."

At a conference in Boston, Chinese transplant doctor, Dr. Zhonghue, admitted that Chinese doctors had transplanted 8,102 kidneys, 3,741 livers and 85 hearts in 2005 alone.

Meanwhile, China has broadened the number of offenses punishable by death and, in an amazing coincidence, more and more of the condemned are comprised of 25-year old and younger, healthy non-smokers.

This is one of China's dirty little secrets. Why it remains a secret is the question. Every member of congress and all the major media outlets were provided a copy of 'Communist Charity' years ago. The ensuing silence has been deafening.

Maybe now, with the eyes of the world on China, there will be more interest in making known the ongoing, lucrative and horrific Chinese trade in illicit organs - and the substantial profits which have undoubtedly contributed to the billions of dollars China has spent in an effort to appear civilized before the world during these Summer Olympic Games.

by Nancy Morgan


Nancy Morgan is a colummnist and news editor for RightBias.com
She lives in South Carolina

Article may be reprinted, with attribution

image: dkimages

Gave Space Shuttle Secrets to China

UPDATE: 3 More Charged with Spying



"He spied for his home country out of love for "the motherland" rather than from a desire to get rich."

Another spy arrested.

Again, for giving secrets to China.

This time, it's "exposed trade secrets from the space shuttle, the Delta IV rocket and the C-17 military transport aircraft."

The Justice Department is reporting that former Boeing engineer Dongfan “Greg” Chung, 72, of Orange, Calif was arrested on espionage charges early this morning. The indictment contends that Chung a former Rockwell employee, and subsequently Boeing engineer sold or gave secrets concerning the Space Shuttle to the Peoples Republic of China (PRC).

The press release claims that Chung was arrested without incident at his home in California.
The indictment, which apparently was finalized last Wednesday accuses Chung of eight counts of economic espionage, one count of conspiracy to commit economic espionage, one count of acting as an unregistered foreign agent without prior notification to the Attorney General, one count of obstruction of justice, and three counts of making false statements to FBI investigators.

The 72-year-old Chung was involved with the Space Shuttle up until his retirement in 2002, however he was brought back as a consultant until 2006.

The indictment alleges that he took and concealed Boeing trade secrets relating to the Space Shuttle, the C-17 military transport aircraft and the Delta IV rocket while employed on the project. Chung allegedly obtained the materials for the benefit of the PRC.




According to Thomas P. O'Brien, the U.S. attorney in Los Angeles, "He spied for his home country out of love for "the motherland" rather than from a desire to get rich."

If found guilty, Chung can expect to live out the rest of his days behind bars: each of the major counts carries a 15-year prison term.

He was expected to make a brief appearance in court yesterday or today.

The Chinese have made War in Space a top priority and have experimented over the last year with methods of knocking out U.S. satellites, rendering America "electronically blind" in any confrontation with the People's Republic.

At least the authorities have caught this spy.

How many are walking around free?


UPDATE: 3 others have also been charged with spying. From AFP:
A US defense official, an ex-Boeing engineer and two others were charged Monday with spying for China involving sensitive military and aerospace secrets, including on the space shuttle.

The four were linked to two espionage conspiracies, which the US Justice Department said posed a "grave danger" to national security.

Pentagon official Gregg William Bergersen, Chinese citizen Yu Xin Kang and Taiwan-born US citizen Tai Shen Kuo were accused of passing classified information to China, mostly pertaining to US military sales to Taiwan, according to Justice Department officials.

Bergersen, 51, is a weapons systems policy analyst at the Pentagon's Defense Security Cooperation Agency, which implement the US Defense Department's foreign military sales program.

Will there be others?


by Mondoreb
images:
* spylab
* realisticforgeworks
Sources:
* Boeing Engineer Charged with Giving Shuttle Secrets to the Chinese
* Orange County Man accused of being a Spy

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