At this point absolutely nobody can claim ignorance unlike what was seen when the Holocaust was underway. It has just gone on too long. Please note that there is no attention paid to real criminals who we can be sure are still been utilized.
And once you accept all that as business as usual it is merely a case of relabeling to run someone else through the system as the doctors need not know. What is clear is that we have unwilling donors.
In the meantime this publicity makes it a major story and allows plenty of additional publicity..
Organ Harvest Documentary Wins Prestigious Peabody Prize
Recognition comes as international medical stance toward China reaches fork in the road
By Matthew Robertson, Epoch Times | April 23, 2015
http://www.theepochtimes.com/n3/1332075-organ-harvest-documentary-wins-prestigious-peabody-prize/
An unflinching documentary about mass murder for profit in modern
China has been granted one of the most prestigious awards in television
and broadcast, the Peabody Award.
“Human Harvest,”
directed by Leon Lee, was produced in 2014 and has been broadcast
around the world and during film festivals since then. It was previously
awarded the 2015 Michael Sullivan Frontline Award for Journalism in a
Documentary.
The film focuses on the harvesting of organs of practitioners
of Falun Gong, a Chinese spiritual discipline, by Chinese military and
civilian hospitals. Falun Gong, which consists of meditative exercises
and moral teachings, has been persecuted in its homeland of China since
1999.
This is a harrowing exposé of a fiendish system of forced organ donor transplants.
The anti-Falun Gong campaign has featured arbitrary detention, forced
ideological re-education, widespread torture in custody, and thousands
of deaths due to that torture.
The campaign was augmented by a media offensive that slandered
adherents as deranged and unworthy of sympathy. Soon after the campaign
against it began, researchers said that the Falun Gong population became
a prime target for the lucrative organ trade.
“With powerful testimonials about the intricacies of the trade and
the human cost, including interviews with Chinese doctors who confide
they’ve been coerced into removing organs from live political prisoners,
this is a harrowing exposé of a fiendish system of forced organ donor
transplants,” wrote the Peabody Award judges, all of whom must endorse award winners.
Pajamas
The night before the official announcement Lee, the director and
producer, was working up a modified version of the feature for broadcast
with his co-producer, Raymond Zhang.
He received the notice that they had won the Peabody while in bed, in
his pyjamas, at about 5:00 a.m. on April 14. “Congratulations, Peabody
Award winner,” the subject line announced, he recalled.
“It is my great pleasure to inform you that ‘Human Harvest: China’s
Illegal Trade,’ is the recipient of a 2014 Peabody Award,” the note
continued. “Congratulations on becoming part of a select group of
honorees.”
Lee said, “I had to read it a couple of times to make sure I got it right.”
The first thing he did was tell his wife, who was sleeping with their
3-year-old son (he still has trouble getting to sleep by himself.) “So I
woke her up. She thought something bad was happening. She said, ‘Can we
talk about it in the morning?'”
Peabodys
The website of the award group
states that there were 46 winners from around 1,100 entries in 2013.
Applications for the 2014 winners closed in January this year. Peabody
quotes Walter Cronkite saying of the award, “You count your Emmys, you
cherish your Peabodys.”
Stephen Colbert, the comic, described the Peabody Award thusly: “like an Oscar wrapped in an Emmy inside a Pulitzer.”
“I’m very happy to receive the award. It’s a great encouragement for
me and my team, but more importantly shows that organ harvesting itself
is being recognized and people are paying more and more attention to the
issue,” Lee said in a telephone interview.
Among the judges that endorsed the award are veteran journalists,
communications professors and deans, two former editors-in-chief of
Time, and a number of public relations executives, according to the Peabody website.
After the award announcement, Lee received an email from Jeffrey P.
Jones, the director of the George Foster Peabody Awards at the
University of Georgia. “We are very proud of the difficult work you’ve
done on such an important issue,” it said. “I hope you can join us in
New York City to spread the word further on a story that truly matters.”
The prestigious endorsement for the documentary is part of a growing
trend of mainstream acknowledgement of a topic that has for years
lingered on the margins of public discourse about China and the human
rights abuses there.
Live Harvest
“Human Harvest” is a lengthy and detailed exploration of the
allegations, evidence, and inference of the mass murder of Falun Gong
prisoners of conscience in China, beginning in around 2000. It includes interviews with doctors,
researchers, labor camp survivors, and organ recipients, building an
overall picture of how the crime likely took place—and even how it may
be continuing.
It is difficult to know whether the harvesting is ongoing, given the lack of transparency around Chinese military hospitals and the transplant system. Researchers said that
around 60,000 Falun Gong practitioners were killed for their organs
from 2000 to around 2008. Interviews with labor camp survivors as late
as 2013, conducted by journalist Ethan Gutmann, indicate that harvesting
activities may have continued at least up till then.
One element of the evidence, which the documentary delves into, is
the harvesting of victims before they are dead—termed live organ
harvesting, which results in the death of the donor.
This method produces the freshest organ, given that every minute a
kidney, liver, or heart is not being flushed with fresh blood, its
quality worsens. It means that the organ is removed while the victim’s
heart is still beating, and that they die from the subsequent blood loss
and trauma. Anaesthetic and muscle relaxants are believed to be used
often to sedate and disable the victim.
‘Fork in the Road’
“This award may indicate a new acceptance within the general public
and within the elite that forced organ harvesting of prisoners of
conscience is real,” said Ethan Gutmann, a journalist whose book, “The Slaughter,” published last year, is an in-depth exploration of the topic.
It also highlights the way in which public and policy-level treatment of the question is “at a fork in the road,” he said.
The Transplantation Society (TTS), a peak international body on
international transplant policy, plans to once again embrace China’s
transplant system this summer. International ties had been put on hold
from early 2014, after Chinese authorities appeared to renege on
previous promises.
Now, after renewed high-profile pledges by the country’s top organ
transplantation Huang Jiefu, that no more prisoners will be used in
organ transplants, TTS is set to publicly endorse China’s transplant
system.
TTS and other international medical groups have not taken it upon
themselves to declare a public stance on the evidence and questions
raised in the “Human Harvest” documentary. Nor do they seem prepared to
demand that Chinese authorities stand to account for the tens of
thousands of prisoners of conscience that are believed to have been
slaughtered for commercial purposes.
In this larger context, “The question is whether a Peabody Award will
create enough of a groundswell so that The Transplantation Society will
reconsider their decision,” said Gutmann. “I don’t know.”
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