Page 193 - Communist Chinas Policy of Oppression in East Turkestan
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Corpses or Organs" issues in the '70s, the use of such organs was legal-
ized. If a prisoner has no family, or if he or they have given permission
for his organs to be used after death, those organs are removed and sold
after sentence has been carried out.
That might seem quite acceptable, but one can see how unjust this
policy actually is when the prevailing conditions in China are consid-
ered.
As we have already seen, human life is probably the cheapest
thing of all in China, and an average of 300 people a month are exe-
cuted. The great majority of those who are executed have nobody to
look out for their interests because families are often not told where
prisoners are kept. They only learn their relatives have been killed after
the event. Most of the time the families of those killed hesitate to ask for
T housands of people are executed every year in communist China.
The bodies are then skinned and their kidneys removed. Once the
organs have been removed, the bodies are then regarded as waste
products, bagged up, and thrown onto a rubbish heap.
Harun Yahya - Adnan Oktar