The Chinese regime’s practice of killing prisoners of conscience for their organs to sell on the transplant market has been the subject of media articles, books, and documentaries.
Now Czech activists have their sights on creating a comic book to raise awareness about the grisly practice.
Kajínek, project coordinator, said they chose the graphic novel format because of its universal appeal.
“It is also a medium that is dignified enough to tell important, real stories. That’s why we decided for it in the end,” he states on the website. Kajínek, who is also the chief-editor of the Czech edition of The Epoch Times, is working on the project in his personal capacity.
“With this comic, we want to add fuel to the fire of resistance and draw attention to crimes that cannot be tolerated: The abuse of life-saving science and the rise of the Communist Party’s totalitarian power in China,” the website states.
Kilgour and Matas were among the first investigators probing the issue since allegations that the Chinese regime was harvesting organs from Falun Gong practitioners first emerged around 2006. They’ve co-authored several reports finding that imprisoned practitioners were being used as unwilling sources for organs on the transplant market.
In reaching this conclusion, the tribunal highlighted various pieces of evidence, including the following: extremely short wait-times for organ transplants advertised by Chinese hospitals; analysis of hospital infrastructure which showed that the regime was performing up to 90,000 transplants a year, vastly more than the official figure of 10,000 transplants; and testimony from Falun Gong practitioners who say they were given blood tests and other medical tests consistent with testing for organ health while incarcerated, while non-Falun Gong prisoners were not tested.
The Chinese regime, which denies the practice, has claimed that from 2015 organ transplants have come only from voluntary donors.
“For the rest of us, it robs us of our humanity and forever poisons our capacity of being human.”