Showing posts with label Hunan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hunan. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Concerns Grow Over China Organ Transplants

Police in Hunan have denied reports that the eyeballs of six-year-old Xiao Bin have been found without their corneas, although the allegations that a black marketeer took the boy's eyes to sell the corneas highlights to lacking state that China's voluntary organ donation system is.  Commercial transplant operations are technically illegal, but wealthy businessmen and "transplant tourists" regularly buy organ and schedule operations, with no questions asked.

The attack comes a week after the announcement that China would scale down it's practice of taking organs for transplant from executed criminals.  Seen by many Chinese as a chance for the deceased criminal to "give something back" to Chinese society, concerns have been raised over a fairly obvious question: If they don't come from criminals, were are organs for transplant going to come from?

For a long time, internal organs have been supplied by so-called "prisoners of conscience", a term commonly used to describe those detained for their religious beliefs.  Such detainees were able to supply enough organs for the Tianjin Oriental Transplant Center for an estimated 2,000 liver transplants a year, despite no public system of organ donation having been established.  From 2003 to 2007, only 130 official voluntary organ donations were made, with a recorded number of nearly 20,000 organ transplants were made in 2005.

As the value for organs increased, so did the incidence of hastily arranged executions.  Zheng Chang Jie was executed in July, but his family was never notified. The secrecy in which executions are carried out in China doesn't make it clear if his organs were harvested and sold, and the fact that his body was cremated following his execution makes it difficult to prove conclusively.

The practice of harvesting organs from executed prisoners became widespread in the mid-1980's, and from 1999, organs collected from criminals accounted for around 90% of all organ donations.  With almost 300, 000 people on the waiting list for organ transplants, only 100,000 operations are approved each year.  The shortfall has led to a black market in organ trade, were "an organ is sold every hour".

In 2012, reporters from The Guardian contacted a trafficker who advertised his services under the banner "donate a kidney, buy and iPad!".  He offered a going rate of £2,500 for a kidney, adding that the operation could be performed in 10 days.  Distrust in the medical system is largely to blame, with organizations like the Chinese Red Cross were charging local hospitals as much as $16,300 for each successful transplant that was organized by them.  Little wonder that Chinese people don't believe that when a kidney or a liver is donated, that it will go to the person who needs it most.

The Chinese government plans to end donations from executed prisoners within two year, and while it may well improve the China's image overseas, it will only make organs more valuable, and more tempting to those who haven't gotten their slice of the Chinese Dream.


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Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Chinese Newspapers Named and Shamed for Faking Stories

You'd think that with all the blatant plagiarism that goes on in the Chinese news industry, sometimes it's easier and faster to write a completely fake story instead of getting your news from The Onion.

To fake a headline in a newspaper in China to sell a few more copies is probably par for the course, but three newspapers named today are guilty of using their fake stories to extort money from local officials.
In one case, a group sent by Beijing-based newspaper China Business Herald blackmailed multiple organizations while interviewing in west China's Qinghai province in June, and released false stories online after failing to receive hush money.

In another case, Sanxiang City Express, a major paper based in central China's Hunan province, published a story in May accusing officials in a local village of neglecting their duties and conspiring with mine owners whose operations destroyed local farmland.

Both stories were complete rubbish, no officials investigated had done anything wrong (for once) and in Hunan, paddy fields were found to be abundant and productive.
The third case involved Shenzhen Economic Daily, which published a series of stories on illegal hospital registration fees that mixed up key definitions while failing to interview a pivotal party.

The association released a statement saying that "these media groups and reporters' behavior seriously violate journalistic professional ethics...resulting in a negative impression on the public while damaging the reputation of journalists," although no mention of what punishment the newspapers will receive, if any, was made.  It's not the first time that Chinese newspapers have used the wheeze of smearing public figures for cash.  Earlier this year, three Beijing based newspapers had their licenses revoked after charges of blackmail, printing fake news and using fake labor contracts to issue press cards.


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