Human rights groups are calling on the G7 and other countries to take action against the Chinese communist regime’s crime of forced organ harvesting from living prisoners of conscience, particularly Falun Gong practitioners.
“After more than two decades of killing Falun Gong practitioners for organs in an unrelenting genocide by attrition, we are faced with an urgent matter of conscience: will we remain silent and embolden the perpetrator in Beijing, or will we take a courageous stand and say firmly that no human being should be killed for his or her organs, and no country, including China, should be allowed to get away with this crime against humanity,” DAFOH Executive Director Dr. Torsten Trey said in a statement.
“For human dignity to prevail in this world, we must stop forced organ harvesting now.”
The persecution has continued unabated to this day, and millions have been detained inside prisons, labor camps, and other facilities, with hundreds of thousands tortured while incarcerated and untold numbers killed, according to the Falun Dafa Information Center.
Aside from the G7, the petition also calls on Argentina, Australia, India, Israel, Mexico, South Korea, and Taiwan to take action to address the issue.
Governments should “issue a joint declaration condemning the [People’s Republic of China’s] practice of forced organ harvesting, calling for its immediate end and an implementation of an intergovernmental action plan,” the petition states.
The action plan should include measures to protect citizens from getting transplants in China, ban any exchange in transplant-related practices with the country, and initiate annual parliamentary hearings, according to the petition.
Moreover, the petition calls for the start of “investigations to determine accountability for any acts contrary to the provisions of the Genocide Convention committed against Falun Gong practitioners, Uyghurs, and others in the PRC.”
“The world must stop turning a blind eye to the crimes against humanity occurring in China. Innocent prisoners of conscience have been, and continue to be, killed for their organs to be used for transplantation,” Wendy Rogers, a distinguished professor from Australia’s Macquarie University and chair of ETAC’s International Advisory Board, said in a statement.
“The G7 have the chance to show leadership on this issue; I urge them to act.”