Canada: Renowned Lawyer Joins Coalition to Investigate the Persecution of Falun Gong in China (Photo)

(Clearwisdom.net) Clive Ansley, a well known Canadian lawyer, has just expressed his wish to join the Coalition to Investigate the Persecution of Falun Gong (CIPFG). Mr. Ansley joins CIPFG one week after Mr. David Kilgour, former Secretary of State (Asian-Pacific) of Canada's Foreign Affairs Ministry, and lawyer Mr. David Matas announced that they would lead an independent Canadian task force to investigate organ harvesting from living Falun Gong practitioners.

A Body Processing Factory and Body Specimen Warehouse in Suburban Changchun

(Clearwisdom.net) I am a medical science student. I found out this past year that the biggest body warehouse in Asia is located in China. Even a small community medical school in China stores more bodies and organ specimens than Waseda University in Tokyo, Japan.

On the Chinese Communist Party's Murder Industry in Recent Years, Part 1 (Photos)

(Clearwisdom.net) Since March 2006, shocking crimes related to harvesting organs from live Falun Gong practitioners persecuted in concentration camps have been exposed. These crimes started at the end of 2000 and became a common practice inside the forced labor camps, prisons, concentration camps and related hospitals throughout China. At the Sujiatun Concentration Camp, the corneas, organs and marrow of several thousand practitioners, men and women, old and young, were removed while they were still alive. Even their hair, skin and fat were sold and their corpses were cremated in the crematorium inside the concentration camp in order to destroy evidence. Several witnesses provided evidence saying that there are at least 36 concentrations camps similar to the Sujiatun Concentration Camp in China. The largest concentration camp, code-named 672-S, is in Jilin Province. Over 120,000 practitioners and dissidents are held there. The concentration camp in the Jiutai region of Jilin Province is the fifth largest place in the country, where more than 14,000 people are detained.

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