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==This is a valuable section==
|action1=GAN
This is a valuable section that I just stumbled upon while researching Human Rights abuses in China prior to the Beijing Olympics.
|action1date=14:12, 24 September 2010
|action1link=Talk:Organ transplantation in the People's Republic of China/GA1
|action1result=listed
|action1oldid=386733851


|action2=GAR
It shows corruption of the current regeim and intolerance it has toward groups like Falun Gong.
|action2date=00:22, 2 January 2011 (UTC)
|action2link=Misplaced Pages:Good article reassessment/Organ transplantation in the People's Republic of China/1
|action2result=delisted
|action2oldid=405405746


|action3=GAN
http://www.religioustolerance.org/falungong2.htm
|action3date=12:08, 27 December 2013 (UTC)
|action3link=Talk:Organ transplantation in China/GA3
|action3result=failed
|action3oldid=587373255


|topic=Biology and medicine
I hope you keep it, though I think Wikepedia is blocked in China exactly because it posts segments that the Chinese regeim would rather have censored. For that reason, such segments are very valuable.
|currentstatus=DGA
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{{WikiProject banner shell|collapsed=yes|class=B|
{{WikiProject China|importance=mid}}
{{WikiProject Medicine|importance=Low}}
{{WikiProject Death|class=C|importance=low}}
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== Merge == ==Prisoner types==
::'''Don't be confused''' between "prisoners sentenced to death" and "executed prisoners"
Discussion in progress here: ] --] 11:09, 17 August 2007 (UTC)
::As common sensed, a prisoner is executed (killed) after and '''only after''' that prisoner is sentenced to death. That is why in wording and in many reports, it say "executed prisoners" but actually the meanings is that "those prisoners who are sentenced to death and then are executed".
:The AfD above was closed as an inappropriate forum for discussing a page move; but there were some good arguments raised there for renaming ] ']', so I have been ] and carried out the move myself. (Previously, ] was a redirect to ].) The main reasons for this alternate name are that it's more neutral, less sensationalistic, and also more appropriate - since the article also covers organ harvesting from individuals other than Falun Gong practitioners. If you disagree with this move, please discuss it here. ] 00:53, 12 October 2007 (UTC)
::However, in this particular situation in China, the BIG problem is that among those "executed prisoners" there are many who are not sentenced to death at all. As the matter of facts, those Falun Gong practitioners are "'''prisoners sentenced to nothing'''" (this is the term in the book "Bloody Harvest", meaning they are in detention centers and labor camps without lawful trials). The ''organ harvesting process'' is also understood as an ''execution process'' in it true sense.
::So, long ago, China agreed that they use "executed prisoners" as source; and now, yes, they also agree about that. The "term" does not change. But the meanings behind changed. Or more correctly, our own understandings about China had been changed. Prior 2006 incidents, we understood that those "executed prisioners" were "prisoners sentenced to death". But after 2006 report, we understand that those number of "prisoners sentenced to deaths" is way too small (about 1,700 per year) compared to the number of transplants (at least 11.000 per year)
::So when talking about numbers, we should separate: "prisoners sentence to death" and "executed prisoners but not sentenced to death". Because it is '''the true issue''' of China now. Of course, taking organs from "living" and "dead" bodies is also a big problem, too. But technically speaking, it is not easy to tell. For example, how you can say a particular organ is taken from a living prisoner? And how many of them are still alive at that point of organ harvesting? But it is much easier to point out that a large number of them are not sentenced to death.
] (]) 04:53, 21 September 2014 (UTC) (sorry for my bad English)


==Recommend to Re-arrange this article==
Organ harvesting from live Falun Gong practitioners is a specific topic. Organ harvesting in China is another topic, which may include this issue, but really is much broader. This could be from executed prisoners, etc., whereas the Falun Gong claims are quite specific and not the same thing. I don't think the ] should be a redirect. It's a related but quite different topic. If there's simply no information on this topic on wikipedia, that would be odd, but it would be for another day to collect and catalogue stuff on that. The Falun Gong evidence I think ought to appear as a subsection in a main article about organ harvesting in China, outlining the topic quickly, but as a daughter article to the Persecution of Falun Gong page and the Organ harvesting in China page. It is not a sensationalistic description--live organ harvesting is essentially the claim. If there is a better way to describe it, let's hear it. Have you seen the report http://organharvestinvestigation.net/? I'll wait till we discuss it and not revert, or you can revert it anytime. --<font style="bold">]</font><font color="black" style="bold">]</font> 01:48, 12 October 2007 (UTC)


I would like to suggest a review + re-arrange an English article about Organ Harvesting in China,
just looking at it now, obviously the whole article is falun gong, with a subsection on the general situation in China acting as a kind of introduction/contextualisation to the Falun Gong stuff... I think there should be a "see further: organ harvesting in China" for that subsection.--<font style="bold">]</font><font color="black" style="bold">]</font> 01:51, 12 October 2007 (UTC)


The ideas is that follow.
I was in favour of a move, and still am. IMHO, the article was far too narrow. It is certainly part of the wider issue: political corruption, central vs local govt, trafficking in human parts, legal issues, medical ethics, government action/ineffectiveness. I believe it can and should be made into a larger topic, where the FG allegations and the K&M reports can also live happily. The article just needs to be considerably fleshed out with reportage about the issue in general, as I have been trying to do. (I have been trying to find stuff about the Harry Wu discovery, but not found anything substantial so far.) ] 04:23, 12 October 2007 (UTC)


----
in the end though, there will be a sufficiently large body of material specifically on the organ harvesting from living falun gong practitioners that it will warrant being its own article. it doesn't actually bother me where the material is located, in and of itself, but I'd say that for purposes of classification and just bureaucratic/convenience reasons like not having massive articles, it should be afforded its own page. There must be stuff on organ harvesting in China generally, though, like the practice of taking organs from prisoners is well known for a while, and I would have thought this stuff would already be somewhere on the wiki--<font style="bold">]</font><font color="black" style="bold">]</font> 05:09, 12 October 2007 (UTC)


The rewrite is to "break" the article into 4 parts:
== Objectivity ==


1. What were happened before 2006<br>
I would like a neutral (and I mean truly neutral) party to look this page over and excise the sections which might be perceived as subjective or biased against either the CPC or Falun Dafa. In the same way I wouldn't want this page to cite Xinhua as fact, I am deeply upset that the article cites Clearwisdom without acknowledging Clearwisdom's own bias. Citing CPC claims without acknowledging the impartiality of the source makes Misplaced Pages simply another Party mouthpiece; citing Clearwisdom without acknowledging that it's a strongly pro-Falun dafa source is just as bad.
2. The 2006 story of wife of surgeon, and The Allegations, and then the investigations + results<br>
3. What is the responses of important bodies after 2006<br>
4. Some topics that should be viewed separately in the view of legal, virtue, medical,...


=== Part 1: Before 2006 ===
] 06:19, 13 October 2007 (UTC)


The part (1) is basically telling the background story, which is something like that: as for Transplant, China was doing it wrong, and international communities already had a lot of criticisms about that: (i) taking organ from prisoners without a transparent procedure; (ii) having no organ donation program/system to collect organs from the mass; which resulted in that executed prisoners were the only viable source of organ.


Before the 2006 incident, those criticisms were not *very* harsh, because, after all, those people were prisoners sentenced to death. Apparently the situation were not as grave as today.
==material for this article specifically==


=== Part 2: Allegations and investigations ===
For example: http://www.hrw.org/reports/1994/china1/china_948.htm


The part (2) expresses that once after the 2006 testimony, the situation is clearly changed in the essences: those victims were not prisoners sentenced to death, they were prisoners sentenced to nothing. So, the "wrong procedure" (what ever you call it) happened before 1999 2000 now became a "crime". Which should be treated totally differently. The call for China to make the procedure transparent is much more demanding now.
There would be plenty of stuff like this. Amnesty probably has a report, too. There are probably others with a report on the prisoner situation. Someone just needs to do the research and write the article. This is different from the Falun Gong evidence. I would do this, and might if no one else does, but my priorities are clear.--<font style="bold">]</font><font color="black" style="bold">]</font> 03:24, 14 October 2007 (UTC)


The Allegations is a sort of Allegations from the consciences:
==suggest taking out Falun Gong stuff from this article==


1. What China were doing before 1999 2000 were wrong (getting organs from prisoners without a proper procedure, and having no other source of organs); and now, after the boom of transplant tourism, that wrong way of doing became a "crime". As long as China has no transparent organ harvesting procedure, this Allegation is still valid. Note that China openly admitted in 2005 that they were harvesting organs from prisoners.<br>
I think it would be simpler to just remove the mentions of live organ harvesting in this article, or give it two sentences that we can all agree on. That's not what this article is about, really. Sources like the above about would be useful. The fact is there is no organ donor program in China, so all their organ donations are in some way illicit, and as far as I can understand, the majority of the information on organ donations in China either comes from the CCP or human rights groups who say they are killing prisoners or Falun Gong practitioners. Anyway, it's not the focus here so I say take it out except for two sentences. --<font style="bold">]</font><font color="black" style="bold">]</font> 00:28, 28 May 2008 (UTC)
2. Falun Gong practitioners and other prisoners of consciences are (the main) victims.


The point (1) has nothing to investigate, because China already admit it in 2005. Now it is to tell China to have proper laws and policies about that (which China still not do it until today)
Don't know how it got there, but I too agree it is out of place in this article. ] (]) 15:22, 28 May 2008 (UTC)


The point (2) require investigations to prove or disprove it.
:I think it was our good friend Charles...--<font style="bold">]</font><font color="black" style="bold">]</font> 22:53, 28 May 2008 (UTC)


Writing that way has some good benefits (which I learn after reading the book Bloody Harvest).
::your accusation is again proven false. This diff proves I'm not the one who added FLG's accusation:
::http://en.wikipedia.org/search/?title=Organ_harvesting_in_the_People%27s_Republic_of_China&diff=215151241&oldid=211208392
::As to who actually added Epoch Times/FLG accusation, here's the diff that proves it:
::http://en.wikipedia.org/search/?title=Organ_harvesting_in_the_People%27s_Republic_of_China&diff=202471146&oldid=202467886
::] (]) 19:29, 10 June 2008 (UTC)


First, it tell the readers "not to be shocked" by seeing what's happening in China. China just continued what they had been doing since 1960s 1970s 1980s 1990s, it was only that now they had a new (and big) batch of prisoners.
I'm sorry to wrongfully accuse you.--<font style="bold">]</font><font color="black" style="bold">]</font> 23:47, 10 June 2008 (UTC)
* ] (]) 05:51, 11 June 2008 (UTC)


Second, it tell the readers not to be confused when thinking that "Organ Harvesting" is "Falun Gong issue". It is CCP's issue, not Falun Gong's. And that issue had been there long before the crack down.
Ha ha!--<font style="bold">]</font><font color="black" style="bold">]</font> 09:07, 11 June 2008 (UTC)


Then there came investigations. Kilgour Matas works was one (and the best) of them. There were other investigations and their results. This article should tell one by one. Doing that way is to give a clear view for readers.
== the title is not consistent with the content ==


=== Part 3: What the involved parties say and do? What the other big guys say and do? ===
After I read the whole article, I felt death roll prisoners are killed b/c death roll but not just to harvest their organ. This is not organ harvest in the sense no one died for organ transplant.


The part (3) should be rewrite and update with new information. Well, there are many of them.
suggest to revise the title to "Organ harvest from death roll prisoners in China." <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">—Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 03:53, 24 November 2008 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->


===== The reaction of China =====
== Proposed merge ==
===Discussion===


1. Official reactions. Yes, it is very good to list what China officially say and do about this. No matter how many they say and do, the real situation is still the same as before: no transparent procedure and no real organ donation system in place. Now, it is 2014, the situation is the same.
Obviously China is "asking" death row prisoners and their families if it's "okay" to harvest their organs after death in exchange for some small recompense, a practice unilaterally condemned by the international community because you simply '''cannot''' strike a fair and balanced deal with someone you are going to put to death by force. The prisoners are not in any position to bargain or disagree.


2. Unofficial reactions. Yes, it is also very good to list what China unofficial do about this. Especially whenever the organ harvesting issue arise, they bring Falun Gong in, as if it is Falun Gong's issue. There are many more example of how China do disinformation about this. After all, when the criminal is pointed out, the first thing it do is to deny it. After it cannot deny it, it would make thing confused.
We do know that Falun Gong is prohibited from working within China and that anyone who does so risks imprisonment and for that they also risk the death sentence (probably for some variant of "disturbing the peace" or "conspiring against the state" or some other bogus charge.


===== The reaction of Falun Gong =====
Some sources ''allege'' that Falun Gong is being specifically targeted, but they are not enough. The primary source of these allegations is The Epoch Times, a Falun Gong newspaper. The "secondary" source is a report by David Kilgour and David Matas who were commissioned by Falun Gong-founded organization "]". They are secondary at best, primary at worst, and the allegation is based on anecdotal evidence and correlation of unknown causality. There are no other sources. McMillan-Scott (sp?) was apparently a member of the CIPFG too and also anecdotal, non-scientific. What remains? Kilgour and Matas. Not a large body of evidence. The "particular topic" of organ harvesting from Falun Gong practitioners is not particular, it pertains to organ harvesting in China. The extent to which that includes victims who are members of Falun Gong, deserves to be mentioned in the combined article, it does not need to be treated separately with duplicated data and higher editor overhead to oversee. ] 12:05, 19 August 2009 (UTC)


Why not openly tell the reaction of Falun Gong? Falun Gong group has all the full rights to say openly and clearly about what damages they got. So, all the reaction of Falun Gong go here. Not need to tell in all other parts; just write in this one part.
*'''Support''' there is insufficient evidence that the Chinese state treats the FLG differently from any other group vis a vis organ harvesting to warrant a separate page devoted to this subject.] (]) 14:22, 19 August 2009 (UTC)
*'''Support''' "''Organ harvesting is happening in China, but I see no evidence proving it is aimed particularly at Falun Gong practitioners.''" - David Ownby, source . ] (]) 02:13, 20 August 2009 (UTC)
*'''Support''' -- once again -- per above. ] (]) 05:37, 20 August 2009 (UTC)
*'''Support''' -- and to think I got so worked up by DilipRajeev on this... Good to see the situation is improving. --]<sup>] | ] | ]</sup> 08:18, 20 August 2009 (UTC)
*'''Strong Support''' -- per above.--''']''' (]) 12:04, 20 August 2009 (UTC)
*'''Oppose''' -- because per ] of ] and because nobody said what has changed since this was previously discussed: , , . --] (]) 18:42, 20 August 2009 (UTC)
:'''Comment''': Every request is individual. Notability for specific subject has not been shown. ] 19:23, 20 August 2009 (UTC)
*'''Strong oppose''' -- just because silence may give consent. I believe ] qualifies notability, and anything else is a technical issue. Even if it were merged, it would presumably be a subsection of this page--then, when it got too big, it would be split again. It's like ] and the Tiananmen immolation incident pages; the latter was too big for the former, so it was broken off. The issue of organ harvesting from Falun Gong practitioners is a daughter article of both Organ harvesting in the PRC and the Persecution of Falun Gong articles; it can have a small subsection in both articles, linking to the main one. There are two reasons for it to have its own page: it's too long (even after the mauling it took, which I've yet to address), and it is notable in itself, ].--<font style="bold">]</font><font color="black" style="bold">]</font> 20:07, 20 August 2009 (UTC)
::<small>Also might be of interest is my ] of your stack of sources. --]<sup>] | ] | ]</sup> 12:23, 21 August 2009 (UTC)</small>


===== The reaction of UN =====
:Asdfg12345, What is the technical issue? SEPARATE notability has not been shown. Organ harvesting in China is notable, targets prisoners and there are prisoners who are Falun Gong. It has not been shown that they are specifically targeted so there is no need to keep a separate, unnecessarily long, "daughter" article on it. Good idea that the content can be divided between ] and "Organ harvesting in the PRC".
: Please do not rehash your "stack of sources" when the legitimacy of the contents of that list has not been agreed upon. For now, it's a list of sources of variable and uncertain reliability, notability and independence. It shows nothing, for now. ] 20:21, 20 August 2009 (UTC)
:: What do you mean "SEPARATE notability"? What is that? For example if there is a man going to the moon for the first time, everybody will use NASA's report and footage, right? And it is notable because third party sources report about it. The notability is the same here. Unfortunately the Chinese Government denied several times independent investigation on it's soil. But it did leave a few clues and official documents, making ] question it, among others, and demanding strongly for answer, and yes, he is the United Nation represantative. --] (]) 20:53, 21 August 2009 (UTC)


How Mr Novak ask China in 2007 and 2008, and how he was ignored. etc.
:::To define the requirement of separate notability for "organ harvesting on falun gong victims", I recommend Maunus' post on the Falun Gong talk page who I think phrased it better than I have. ] 21:15, 21 August 2009 (UTC)


UPR 2009, how China was asked to allow 3rd parties investigations and how China rejected it. etc.
===Meta discussion===
There should be a centralised discussion on this. Start a merger proposal and get a wider audience. We'll outline the arguments there. Actually, I already started an RfC which address this issue (the notability of the Falun Gong-related topic)--<font style="bold">]</font><font color="black" style="bold">]</font> 17:00, 19 August 2009 (UTC)
:As per ], the target article (i.e. this one) is the recommended place for discussion, but a link to this discussion has been created on the ] as well. ] reads:
:#'' Create one discussion section, typically on the destination article's Talk page. This should include a list of the affected articles and a merger rationale.''
:#'' Tag each article with the appropriate merger tag. All tag Discuss links should be specified to point at the new discussion section.''
:This is exactly what has been done. The point is that there should be a place for editors who are uninvolved with the Falun Gong project to discuss the inclusion as well. I really don't think there's need for a merger proposal. Further quotes from ]:
:: ''Merging is a normal editing action, something any editor can do, and as such does not need to be proposed and processed. If you think merging something improves the encyclopedia, you can be bold and perform the merger, as described below. Because of this, it makes little sense to object to a merger purely on procedural grounds, e.g. "you cannot do that without discussion" is not a good argument.''
:The reason I put merger tags up is to give information. The discussion is still going on, or I would have ] made the edit already. If anyone had disagreed, they could have reverted it. ] 19:46, 19 August 2009 (UTC)


...
::You might want to link your RfC to this merge proposal discussion, so that editors here can find the RfC. Is it on the Falun gong organ harvesting talk page? ] 19:54, 19 August 2009 (UTC)
::: I think discussion should be kept in one place, see also here: and the RFC here and the previous "official" discussion here: , if I missed any other discussion, please feel free to add link to them. --] (]) 21:54, 19 August 2009 (UTC)
:::*As Per says, the proper procedure seem to have been followed. In addition, I have now listed it on ]. I am not deluded that a flood of new editors will come as a result of this attempt at wider recruitment. ] (]) 02:08, 20 August 2009 (UTC)
:::I agree the discussion should be held in one place, so does policy, and policy says this is where it should be held. ] 10:06, 20 August 2009 (UTC)


===== The reaction of EU =====
Do you mean they will? This is exciting! *rubs hands*--<font style="bold">]</font><font color="black" style="bold">]</font> 04:37, 20 August 2009 (UTC)
<br>He means they won't... put your hands back in your pockets :P ] (]) 05:33, 20 August 2009 (UTC)


2013 resolution
* by the way, in what relation does the discussion to merge these two article relate to the notability of the other one? It wouldn't be appropriate to wheel out my truckload of secondary reliable sources on the other topic here. But I'm just wondering what the sense of this discussion is, when a resolution to the notability discussion will effectively obviate this one. Thoughts? (@Seb: hah) --<font style="bold">]</font><font color="black" style="bold">]</font> 05:35, 20 August 2009 (UTC)
It wasn't apropriate for you to roll out a long unsorted list of primary and secondary more or less reliable, more or less independent sources and then not participate further in the discussion on the other talk page, and it's not apropriate here. But the sources themselves could be used to improve the article. ] 10:06, 20 August 2009 (UTC)


===== The reaction of US =====
How was it not appropriate? Isn't such a list necessary for establishing the notability, or non-notability, of the subject?--<font style="bold">]</font><font color="black" style="bold">]</font> 17:10, 20 August 2009 (UTC)


...
:No. Rather than a mixed bag of small unremarkable country newspapers, notable studies and primary partisan sources mentioning Falun gong only in the context of organ harvesting in China, it would have been enough with two or three secondary, independent sources giving significant coverage to the notability of the specific event of persecution of Falun Gong. Instead you more or less forced the other editors of the page to determine which link was useful, which was not, and which of the links were ''dead''. Especially after having asked for 24 hours or consideration, after having had five days of it... you're stalling for time. Why? ] 19:21, 20 August 2009 (UTC)


===== The reaction of Others =====
::I'm not sure I understand what you mean, and I'm sorry if I've angered you. I presented a lot of links to independent reliable sources on the issue; some of them discuss the issue in depth, some are smaller reports but are focused on the issue. There are at least two or three independent sources giving significant coverage to the topic. I didn't post any links that I didn't think were useful; I don't believe any of the links I posted were dead. Most of them were exclusively about the issue. As far as I can tell, that makes it clearly pass notability. We should get a uninvolved editors to give their opinions on notability though, if we cannot agree, despite how obvious it strikes me. Interestingly, you are not convinced that the sources provided establish notability (though I am yet to understand why); whereas OC believes they do, but that it's notability is actually irrelevant as to whether the article be merged. I don't understand that dynamic, either.--<font style="bold">]</font><font color="black" style="bold">]</font> 20:01, 20 August 2009 (UTC)


=== Part 4: Miscellaneous Technical Stuffs ===
:::No, you've presented a mixed bag of links most of which repeated the very same source, some of which were to a repository of ''other'' links of similarily varied quality. Leaving "Two or three" independent sources, all of which could be used to support notability but not reliability, out of a list of.. what, 12? The first link was dead. The three last links were to a collection of other links. I have already answered what I thought of your links where you first posted it. Please look there if you actually do want to discuss it. It seems I was one of the very few who actually read through them all, but I still didn't get a response from you. Instead you repeated the list as a RfC, not even bothering to engage in the discussion. ] 20:25, 20 August 2009 (UTC)


I find that it should be helpful to briefly tell some (small) topics in a more "scientific" way. There are something that only can be seen clearly when being seen in the light of medical, legal (law), human rights... view.
::::I did not know that is what irked you. I will do my best to respond to all arguments from now on. I appreciate the time it took to go through the links. Basically I felt that you missed the point is attempting to dissect each of them and felt that going through and arguing all over again would waste time, thinking it would be simpler to get an outside assessment. Basically if they are secondary reliable sources and they are about the issue--whether they refer to K/M a lot or not--they contribute to the notability. If you only need two or three secondary independent sources, then just take Ethan Gutmann's "China's gruesome harvest" in the weekly standard, Tom Treasure, the K/M report itself, Kirk Allison, Manfred Nowak, the UNCAT submission, the CRS report (which has a subsection to the issue), and a handful of the Ottawa Citizens pieces, including the one which argues against the claims by Glen McGregor. AI came out with a statement saying it was inconclusive as well, for example. There's a bunch. You may want to shoot down the report--I disagree--but it doesn't matter because there's still the other sources.--<font style="bold">]</font><font color="black" style="bold">]</font> 21:04, 20 August 2009 (UTC)


# The requirement of organ matching, why? An organ must be plant within 12h or 24h, why?
:::::''Of course'' I took the time to go through them. It would not have been fair to the GOOD references if I had ignored it. I'm frustrated that you expected others to make the source check, others to read through them and then not even take the time to participate in a discussion about the many sources you had given. I "dissected" each of them because I '''read''' each of them. What were you going to do when you got that "outside assessment"? Would you complain if they too wanted to argue every source, wanted to read and comment on every link? I'm sorry I don't have access to Tom Treasure's report, but I've read Bloody Harest and the articles you've linked so far. Nowak and UNCAT are retellings of K&M, as several of us have tried to explain to you. They are not separate or independent, they are DEpendent on K&M and can contribute to the notability of K&M, but not its reliability or worth as a third-party source. Why would I '''want''' to "shoot down the report"??? What would motivate me to do so, do you suppose? ] 15:09, 21 August 2009 (UTC)
# So, there are 'technical' reason why the waiting time in other countries is so long. Then, why the waiting time in China is so short?
# Buying and selling human organs or parts is the issue of both law and humanity. What the WHO Principle Guidelines say about this? That's why the transparent procedure of organ harvesting is very important. That's why the world has been insisting demanding China to do that since 1980s 1990s, long before the boom of transplant tourism. Until now, when China is a leading player in the field, it still not do it. You know, some readers do not really understand that organs are not something to trade. The whole medical industry has been investing a lot about laws and guidelines to make sure things go right.
# The existence of a working organ donation system is important, which all other countries do. The point is that the organ transplant industry cannot based on a pool of prisoners, right? As long as China has no working donation system, all their laws and policies are just empty talks, unless they stop the organ transplant industry.


] (]) 08:09, 2 September 2014 (UTC) (sorry for my really bad English)
I rather think you misunderstand the requirements for notability. Much of the evidence in the K/M report is publicly verifiable, circumstantial evidence. It really does not matter one iota when news reports quote the same evidence they used in explaining the issue of organ harvesting. This is the one argument I've heard. It doesn't matter--that only goes toward the notability of the topic. This information should be documented by this encyclopedia. The Tom Treasure thing reiterates the evidence in the K/M report, along with a lot of other sources--they all reiterate it--often there is nothing else for them to go on, as I say, because that report is a fairly comprehensive appraisal of all available evidence. Ethan Gutmann has some of his own stuff, and I'll add that in due course. The point is not the ''content'' of what this abundance of other sources way, or the ''quality'' of it, it's merely that ''it exists'', it satisfies ], and its independent--then it boosts the notability of the topic. You're basically arguing that because K/M's report apparently has holes in it all the other sources which repeat its claims are therefore useless. This doesn't hold water.--<font style="bold">]</font><font color="black" style="bold">]</font> 21:28, 22 August 2009 (UTC)


==Good article==
==Moving the Falun Gong specific material here?==
I would certainly not rate this as a good article, not in its current form. —'''<span style="color:darkred;">Zujine</span>|]''' 21:53, 18 August 2010 (UTC)
There should be a subsection and the rest in its own page. Whoever did this is putting the cart before the horse. <s>This strikes me as blatantly agenda-driven</s>. Half this article is now about the Falun Gong stuff--that's just silly. This was clearly an attempt to boost the case to 'merge' the pages, which is obviously code for cutting half the information and subsuming it into this page. Do some people want to play down all these sources and evidence? I don't know. But I wouldn't blame anyone from drawing that conclusion based on this. Let's just respect wikipedia policies, okay? Please refresh: ], ], particularly ], and ]. Thanks.--<font style="bold">]</font><font color="black" style="bold">]</font> 21:24, 22 August 2009 (UTC)
::What agenda would that be? Enforcing consensus? The movement is not silly and what you claim to be "Falun Gong stuff" is mostly general commentary about organ harvesting. ] 21:34, 22 August 2009 (UTC)
:::Yes -- what agenda? ] (]) 21:36, 22 August 2009 (UTC)


*I'm quite open to that possibility, but it's difficult being objective with something one's had a major hand in writing. It would be great if you would care to elaborate, or roll your sleeves up... ] ] 01:56, 19 August 2010 (UTC)
What agenda indeed. I'm flummoxed. Please see the organ harvesting talk page regarding the claim that most of the material is general commentary; most of it is clearly Falun Gong related and a response to the Kilgour/Matas report.--<font style="bold">]</font><font color="black" style="bold">]</font> 21:42, 22 August 2009 (UTC)


I think that the article is actually very good, from a quick view. The information is detailed and long enough. I think the beginning needs a major facelift. A good article must be not only full of knowledge, but visually appealing. Otherwise, the article is very nice.
:Saw it, read it. Again: what agenda? ] (]) 21:45, 22 August 2009 (UTC)
] (]) 20:50, 15 September 2010 (UTC)


:Would you expand what you mean by "major facelift" and "visually appealing"? I've looked again at the article and I'm not sure what you mean - other than perhaps having an image in the lead. I agree that images are useful, though I haven't found a suitable free use image of organ transplantation in China, other than Falun Gong related ones, and I would rather not use those in the lead as that would be giving undue weight to the Falun Gong issues. <span style="border: 1px #F10; background-color:cream;">''']''' *]</span> 10:34, 16 September 2010 (UTC)
::I don't have any response for that. The meaning of the claim is not even clear to me, upon reflection. I guess I am just referring to a particular wish to see the pages in a certain way, and pushing toward that without considering policy or proper argumentation and discussion. I've struck out the remark and apologise for making it. I request everyone to respect the discussion process and actually respond to the arguments that I am raising rather than trying to run roughshod with greater numbers.--<font style="bold">]</font><font color="black" style="bold">]</font> 21:55, 22 August 2009 (UTC)

::I don't think a serious article like this needs to be overly "visually appealing." In particular, we should be wary of adding too many lurid FLG "torture displays," thus compromising what should be a neutral presentation of quite serious allegations. Zujine, are you sure you read the article carefully? It actually appears to be quite thorough and well-researched. I'm impressed with the work of the editors here. This subject is notoriously controversial, and a neutral, independent presentation is often hard to come by. Bravo. ] (]) 18:58, 24 September 2010 (UTC)

{{Talk:Organ transplantation in the People's Republic of China/GA1}}
== Article's title ==

From the title of the article, I was expecting to read about the number of organ transplants being done, which centres (hospitals) are involved, differences in treatment regimens with the West, etc.. This article is actually about illegal organ harvesting. The title should be changed accordingly. ] <span style="color:#3CB371;">¤</span> </span>]] 09:47, 16 September 2010 (UTC)
*That bit certainly needs to be built up. --] ] 10:03, 16 September 2010 (UTC)

::There is general information on the numbers of transplants, and history and development of transplants, the local attitude toward transplants; the legal situation regarding transplants, and how this has changed over the years, and how the local attitude toward transplants is changing. There is a fair amount of general information regarding organ transplantation in China. I agree, however, that there is a weighting toward the some of the international concerns regarding organ transplantation - this, though, is appropriate, as that is the most significant aspect of the topic, and needs to be explored in reasonable depth. Where I am less certain, is the amount of material on the Falun Gong allegations - that does seen disproportionate, and should be split out per ]; and it has long been my intention to split that out into a stand alone article. There are issues surrounding that, however. A stand alone article previously existed, and has been merged into this article - and that has been disputed, and some of the people involved in that dispute are under ArbCom sanctions. I am interested to see how an uninvolved GA reviewer would deal with 3 (b) (stays focused) of the ]. <span style="border: 1px #F10; background-color:cream;">''']''' *]</span> 11:21, 16 September 2010 (UTC)

::: There is indeed some general information regarding the number of transplants, local attitudes, and the legal situation. This is all relevant background information for an article about "Illegal Organ Transplantation in China". It is entirely inadequate in an article about "Organ Transplantation in China". If I was GA reviewing this article, I would require that the article's title should be changed. If you really expected me to review this article with its current title, I would quick-fail it. It has excessive undue weight on the illegal aspects of transplantation. It has no mention of the numbers of lung transplants, heart transplants, etc.. Which hospitals is this done in? What are the indications for the various transplants? How many lung transplants are performed for cystic fibrosis? How many for emphysema? What are the drug regimens used? How long do patients survive after transplant? How does this compare with the West? ] <span style="color:#3CB371;">¤</span> </span>]] 09:50, 18 September 2010 (UTC)

::::That is a good point. Then why not change it to "Illegal Organ Harvesting in the PRC," and have another article called "Organ Transplantation in the PRC," which discusses the legitimate aspects of the Chinese trade in organs? Those two articles should be sufficient. From what I can see on the page now, FLG's sensational claims don't warrant a new article. <p>Another approach is to clearly break the article into parts that discuss the legitimate and illegitimate organ transplanting practices. However, the same undue weight problem may emerge, when it's discovered that there is an abundance of information on illicit practices, but little on legal ones.] (]) 19:04, 24 September 2010 (UTC)

::::: TheSoundAndTheFury, I agree with your first suggestion. ] <span style="color:#3CB371;">¤</span> </span>]] 08:41, 25 September 2010 (UTC)

::::::Then why don't we simply do that? ] (]) 13:47, 25 September 2010 (UTC)
:::::::Look, fellers, we just got this to GA. I hope that instead of doing a premature split and end up with two stubs, I think we should build the transplantation part of this article first. --] ] 14:45, 25 September 2010 (UTC)

:::::::: As I noted above, I dispute the validity of this article as a GA under its current title. ] <span style="color:#3CB371;">¤</span> </span>]] 08:42, 27 September 2010 (UTC)
{{outdent}}
As you are not satisfied with the explanations here, the appropriate process is to now go for a Community Reassessment per ], and give your reasons why you feel the article does not meet ]. I think the criteria you'd be saying it fails on would be either 3(a) - "it addresses the main aspects of the topic;* (*This requirement is significantly weaker than the "comprehensiveness" required of featured articles; it allows shorter articles, articles that do not cover every major fact or detail, and overviews of large topics.)" or 3(b) "it stays focused on the topic without going into unnecessary detail". Please let those involved, including the Reviewer, know if you chose to go down this route. <span style="border: 1px #F10; background-color:cream;">''']''' *]</span> 09:40, 27 September 2010 (UTC)

{{Talk:Organ transplantation in the People's Republic of China/GA2}}

==Reviews==
Here are a number of journal articles which could be used to improve this articles scope.
*{{cite journal |author=Huang J |title=Ethical and legislative perspectives on liver transplantation in the People's Republic of China |journal=Liver Transpl. |volume=13 |issue=2 |pages=193–6 |year=2007 |month=February |pmid=17256779 |doi=10.1002/lt.21081 |url=}}
*{{cite journal |author=Huang JF |title= |language=Chinese |journal=Zhonghua Wai Ke Za Zhi |volume=45 |issue=5 |pages=292–6 |year=2007 |month=March |pmid=17535701 |doi= |url=}}
*{{cite journal |author=Tibell A |title=The Transplantation Society's policy on interactions with China |journal=Transplantation |volume=84 |issue=3 |pages=292–4 |year=2007 |month=August |pmid=17700151 |doi=10.1097/01.tp.0000275181.33071.07 |url=}}
*{{cite journal |author=Huang J, Mao Y, Wang Y, Zhang ZJ, Zhao MG, Liu Y |title=Modernization of the organ transplantation program in China |journal=Transplantation |volume=86 |issue=12 |pages=1649–52 |year=2008 |month=December |pmid=19104399 |doi=10.1097/TP.0b013e3181926189 |url=}}
*{{cite journal |author=Shang X, Zhang M |title=Body and organ donation in Wuhan, China |journal=Lancet |volume=376 |issue=9746 |pages=1033–4 |year=2010 |month=September |pmid=20870080 |doi=10.1016/S0140-6736(10)60937-3 |url=}}
] (] · ] · ]) 23:35, 19 December 2010 (UTC)

:Thanks for the list Doc James. Some of the links lead to subscription sites, and from the abstracts seem to cover what is already included in the article. can be read in full, and I'm not seeing much new information; indeed, it seems quite coy on certain details, and I would argue that the Misplaced Pages article contains more information. <span style="border: 1px #F10; background-color:cream;">''']''' *]</span> 09:59, 28 December 2010 (UTC)
:I think it would better if someone who knows Chinese reads the original Chinese version of these articles, instead of using the translated version.--] (]) 09:20, 3 October 2012 (UTC)

== New GAN ==

I am dismayed to see that SilkTork has nominated this article. While the article has improved a little since the GA review in 2010, persisent problems remain regarding criteria 3a and 3b. ] <span style="color:#3CB371;">¤</span> </span>]] 19:21, 19 December 2013 (UTC)

{{Talk:Organ transplantation in China/GA3}}

== Copyvio? ==


I don't see the copyvio, but this template messed up the page. Hard to resolve a problem that is not explained. ] 04:49, 27 March 2015 (UTC)

:We both made edits in rapid succession here. In response to , I now see the offending paragraph which was lifted from the news article, but there's a pretty simple solution to that problem, which is to rewrite or paraphrase it. I've done that. What needs to be oversighted and why? What am I missing? ] 05:00, 27 March 2015 (UTC)
::{{ping|TheBlueCanoe}} I know how important this article is to Falun Gong propagandists, but you should accept it as an unfortunate consequence of one of your fellow FLG editors choosing to plagiarise an entire chunk of it. That chunk that was copied was entirely gratuitous ad I was actually looking to remove it. As I intimated in the edit summary, the current practice requires admin review plus oversight, so that the offending copyvio isn't visible in any of the diffs. So, please don't lift the tag, otherwise no admin will know to take care of it. Regards, --<small><span style="background-color:#ffffff;border: 1px solid;">]</span></small>] 06:00, 27 March 2015 (UTC)

:::It's not necessary to respond to polite queries with ad hominems. Anyway, I suggest you read the template more carefully next time. It looks like there are several steps to properly initiate a copyright investigation, which includes posting a notice on the offending editor's talk page and, more importantly, filing the request at ]. I've taken the liberty of doing that for you. Simply putting the template on the page will not automatically result in a resolution. All it does is make that section inaccessible to readers. Lastly, one need not be a "Falun Gong propagandist" to understand that the killing of religious or political prisoners for their organs is an important issue. ] 02:07, 30 March 2015 (UTC)

*Okay, so apologies for the long delay in processing this. I've investigated and found that the problem here was ], whose every addition to this page was copy-pasted from his sources. Beyond the flagged section, several others remained. I rewrote one, removed most, including a section that ''had'' been revised but is also sourced to a ] on Wordpress. It's not reliable if you can't review the original. :/ I've reviewed every substantial edit by this guy in the article. They were all cleaned years ago by someone as poorly sourced, but that cleanup was unfortunately reverted. Even so, I don't think that rev deletion will be necessary here, as long as they don't get put back. They're fairly small overall and would have a high cost in reducing transparency, since they've been here for years. Sorry to those who are working on the article for the unexpected complication - I hope you can repair the damage he left without much difficulty! --] <sup>]</sup> 00:26, 26 April 2015 (UTC)

== objection and update needed... ==

this article and the one specifically about falun gong allegations obviously needs to be updated. the deletion of a stupidly written genocide paragraph and the addition of pro-chinese government material doesn't cut the mustard. but i don't have time for that now and it will take a lot more reading until i catch up to speed on this complicated issue. I just want to register my objection, since we work on a silence=consent model on the 'pedia. it will also take some work to ensure that the articles are quite separate in content. it may come out that the history of organ transplantation in china is the history of the use of certain individuals as an organ source - or it may not. until then there should be as much separation as possible. <span style="text-shadow:#000000 0.1em 0.1em 0.1em">]<span style="color:Gray;"> '''''monsoon''''' </span>]</span> 04:20, 27 August 2016 (UTC)

:It's terrible that this article has still not been updated a year after your comment. I will make a couple of very small changes, but we need someone to do something much more substantive. ] &#124; ] &mdash; 16:31, 31 August 2017 (UTC)
:::Clicking through articles on Xinjiang camps, claims of organ harvesting there, clicked through to this one.... and now it's three years after that comment saying it was one year! It will take way too much time to get up to speed on this issue, though. Someone needs to research this extensively. ] (]) 14:11, 18 May 2020 (UTC)
::::I reached this article through ]. Actually, I have no idea how the ] falls under the definition of ], but that is a different issue.
::::Yeah, this article is a mess, and seems to have been written to drive more clicks to Falun Gong articles. In order to make it actually informative, it would be good to take as model other articles like
::::*]
::::*]
::::*]
::::] (]) 19:31, 21 December 2020 (UTC)

Latest revision as of 13:43, 11 February 2024

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Prisoner types

Don't be confused between "prisoners sentenced to death" and "executed prisoners"
As common sensed, a prisoner is executed (killed) after and only after that prisoner is sentenced to death. That is why in wording and in many reports, it say "executed prisoners" but actually the meanings is that "those prisoners who are sentenced to death and then are executed".
However, in this particular situation in China, the BIG problem is that among those "executed prisoners" there are many who are not sentenced to death at all. As the matter of facts, those Falun Gong practitioners are "prisoners sentenced to nothing" (this is the term in the book "Bloody Harvest", meaning they are in detention centers and labor camps without lawful trials). The organ harvesting process is also understood as an execution process in it true sense.
So, long ago, China agreed that they use "executed prisoners" as source; and now, yes, they also agree about that. The "term" does not change. But the meanings behind changed. Or more correctly, our own understandings about China had been changed. Prior 2006 incidents, we understood that those "executed prisioners" were "prisoners sentenced to death". But after 2006 report, we understand that those number of "prisoners sentenced to deaths" is way too small (about 1,700 per year) compared to the number of transplants (at least 11.000 per year)
So when talking about numbers, we should separate: "prisoners sentence to death" and "executed prisoners but not sentenced to death". Because it is the true issue of China now. Of course, taking organs from "living" and "dead" bodies is also a big problem, too. But technically speaking, it is not easy to tell. For example, how you can say a particular organ is taken from a living prisoner? And how many of them are still alive at that point of organ harvesting? But it is much easier to point out that a large number of them are not sentenced to death.

103.9.196.17 (talk) 04:53, 21 September 2014 (UTC) (sorry for my bad English)

Recommend to Re-arrange this article

I would like to suggest a review + re-arrange an English article about Organ Harvesting in China,

The ideas is that follow.


The rewrite is to "break" the article into 4 parts:

1. What were happened before 2006
2. The 2006 story of wife of surgeon, and The Allegations, and then the investigations + results
3. What is the responses of important bodies after 2006
4. Some topics that should be viewed separately in the view of legal, virtue, medical,...

Part 1: Before 2006

The part (1) is basically telling the background story, which is something like that: as for Transplant, China was doing it wrong, and international communities already had a lot of criticisms about that: (i) taking organ from prisoners without a transparent procedure; (ii) having no organ donation program/system to collect organs from the mass; which resulted in that executed prisoners were the only viable source of organ.

Before the 2006 incident, those criticisms were not *very* harsh, because, after all, those people were prisoners sentenced to death. Apparently the situation were not as grave as today.

Part 2: Allegations and investigations

The part (2) expresses that once after the 2006 testimony, the situation is clearly changed in the essences: those victims were not prisoners sentenced to death, they were prisoners sentenced to nothing. So, the "wrong procedure" (what ever you call it) happened before 1999 2000 now became a "crime". Which should be treated totally differently. The call for China to make the procedure transparent is much more demanding now.

The Allegations is a sort of Allegations from the consciences:

1. What China were doing before 1999 2000 were wrong (getting organs from prisoners without a proper procedure, and having no other source of organs); and now, after the boom of transplant tourism, that wrong way of doing became a "crime". As long as China has no transparent organ harvesting procedure, this Allegation is still valid. Note that China openly admitted in 2005 that they were harvesting organs from prisoners.
2. Falun Gong practitioners and other prisoners of consciences are (the main) victims.

The point (1) has nothing to investigate, because China already admit it in 2005. Now it is to tell China to have proper laws and policies about that (which China still not do it until today)

The point (2) require investigations to prove or disprove it.

Writing that way has some good benefits (which I learn after reading the book Bloody Harvest).

First, it tell the readers "not to be shocked" by seeing what's happening in China. China just continued what they had been doing since 1960s 1970s 1980s 1990s, it was only that now they had a new (and big) batch of prisoners.

Second, it tell the readers not to be confused when thinking that "Organ Harvesting" is "Falun Gong issue". It is CCP's issue, not Falun Gong's. And that issue had been there long before the crack down.

Then there came investigations. Kilgour Matas works was one (and the best) of them. There were other investigations and their results. This article should tell one by one. Doing that way is to give a clear view for readers.

Part 3: What the involved parties say and do? What the other big guys say and do?

The part (3) should be rewrite and update with new information. Well, there are many of them.

The reaction of China

1. Official reactions. Yes, it is very good to list what China officially say and do about this. No matter how many they say and do, the real situation is still the same as before: no transparent procedure and no real organ donation system in place. Now, it is 2014, the situation is the same.

2. Unofficial reactions. Yes, it is also very good to list what China unofficial do about this. Especially whenever the organ harvesting issue arise, they bring Falun Gong in, as if it is Falun Gong's issue. There are many more example of how China do disinformation about this. After all, when the criminal is pointed out, the first thing it do is to deny it. After it cannot deny it, it would make thing confused.

The reaction of Falun Gong

Why not openly tell the reaction of Falun Gong? Falun Gong group has all the full rights to say openly and clearly about what damages they got. So, all the reaction of Falun Gong go here. Not need to tell in all other parts; just write in this one part.

The reaction of UN

How Mr Novak ask China in 2007 and 2008, and how he was ignored. etc.

UPR 2009, how China was asked to allow 3rd parties investigations and how China rejected it. etc.

...

The reaction of EU

2013 resolution

The reaction of US

...

The reaction of Others

Part 4: Miscellaneous Technical Stuffs

I find that it should be helpful to briefly tell some (small) topics in a more "scientific" way. There are something that only can be seen clearly when being seen in the light of medical, legal (law), human rights... view.

  1. The requirement of organ matching, why? An organ must be plant within 12h or 24h, why?
  2. So, there are 'technical' reason why the waiting time in other countries is so long. Then, why the waiting time in China is so short?
  3. Buying and selling human organs or parts is the issue of both law and humanity. What the WHO Principle Guidelines say about this? That's why the transparent procedure of organ harvesting is very important. That's why the world has been insisting demanding China to do that since 1980s 1990s, long before the boom of transplant tourism. Until now, when China is a leading player in the field, it still not do it. You know, some readers do not really understand that organs are not something to trade. The whole medical industry has been investing a lot about laws and guidelines to make sure things go right.
  4. The existence of a working organ donation system is important, which all other countries do. The point is that the organ transplant industry cannot based on a pool of prisoners, right? As long as China has no working donation system, all their laws and policies are just empty talks, unless they stop the organ transplant industry.

SenTrang (talk) 08:09, 2 September 2014 (UTC) (sorry for my really bad English)

Good article

I would certainly not rate this as a good article, not in its current form. —Zujine|talk 21:53, 18 August 2010 (UTC)

  • I'm quite open to that possibility, but it's difficult being objective with something one's had a major hand in writing. It would be great if you would care to elaborate, or roll your sleeves up... Ohconfucius 01:56, 19 August 2010 (UTC)

I think that the article is actually very good, from a quick view. The information is detailed and long enough. I think the beginning needs a major facelift. A good article must be not only full of knowledge, but visually appealing. Otherwise, the article is very nice. Ryderofpelham123 (talk) 20:50, 15 September 2010 (UTC)

Would you expand what you mean by "major facelift" and "visually appealing"? I've looked again at the article and I'm not sure what you mean - other than perhaps having an image in the lead. I agree that images are useful, though I haven't found a suitable free use image of organ transplantation in China, other than Falun Gong related ones, and I would rather not use those in the lead as that would be giving undue weight to the Falun Gong issues. SilkTork * 10:34, 16 September 2010 (UTC)
I don't think a serious article like this needs to be overly "visually appealing." In particular, we should be wary of adding too many lurid FLG "torture displays," thus compromising what should be a neutral presentation of quite serious allegations. Zujine, are you sure you read the article carefully? It actually appears to be quite thorough and well-researched. I'm impressed with the work of the editors here. This subject is notoriously controversial, and a neutral, independent presentation is often hard to come by. Bravo. The Sound and the Fury (talk) 18:58, 24 September 2010 (UTC)

GA Review

This review is transcluded from Talk:Organ transplantation in the People's Republic of China/GA1. The edit link for this section can be used to add comments to the review.

Reviewer: Nikkimaria (talk) 03:23, 18 September 2010 (UTC)

Hello! I'll be reviewing this article for possible GA status. My review should be posted within the next day or two. Cheers, Nikkimaria (talk) 03:23, 18 September 2010 (UTC)

I've decided to place this article on hold to allow time for the below issues to be addressed. I am watching this review page, so please respond below. Nikkimaria (talk) 03:07, 19 September 2010 (UTC)

Writing and formatting

  • Be consistent in using American or British English
  • "In the 1990s, growing concerns about possible ethical abuses arising from coerced consent and corruption led medical groups and human rights organizations to start condemning the practice in the 1990s" - no need to repeat 1990s
  • "the Chinese Medical Association agreed not to use the organs of prisoners for transplantation, except for members of their immediate family" - please tell me "their" refers to the prisoners and not the CMA!
  • Spell out or link MP on first occurrence
  • Should include a few more internal links. I'm surprised that Organ donation wasn't linked as a matter of course. Other likely links include hepatitis, Amnesty International, etc
  • "In China, organ transplantation began in the 1960s, which grew to a peak of over 13,000 transplants a year by 2004" - grammar. Also, transplants peaked in 2004
  • "development of immuno-supressant drug, cyclosporine A, made transplants a more viable option for patients since the 1970s" - grammar
  • "condemned taking organs from executed prisoners as it was not known if they had given consent to the use of their organs" - reword for clarity
  • What is WHA44.25?
  • Check use of semi-colons
  • "assisted Wang to give" -> "assisted Wang in giving"?
  • "was cite by ET" - grammar
  • "argued that the hospital was incapable of housing 6,000 persons" - okay, but what does that have to do with anything?
  • The mini-paragraph at the start of the Falun Gong section should be reworked and moved to the start of the report subsection
  • Don't abbreviate their names as "K&M"; do so for the report title only if the sources do so
  • "US dollar price lists various vital organs such as kidneys and hearts" - grammar
  • "Chinese authorities to adequately respond... and an explanation" - grammar
  • "holocaust" should be capitalized
  • Minimize the number of one-sentence paragraphs
  • Kilgour-Matas report or Kilgour Matas Report?
  • "which stipulated that medical centres must meet for transplant services" - missing word?
  • "In March, 2006, the Ministry of Health issued the Interim Provisions on Clinical Application and Management of Human Organ Transplantation, which stipulated that medical centres must meet for transplant services; the provinces were made responsible for plans for clinical applications. Establishments performing transplantation are thereby obliged to incorporate ethics, medical and surgical expertise, and intensive care" - I'm not sure I follow the progression here, could you clarify?
  • "to restrict transplantations from donors to their immediate relatives" - all donors, or prisoners?
  • The human rights article is linked in the text and thus shouldn't be in See also
    • I think that Ohconfucius has dealt with these matters. Please let me know if any have been missed. I comment on WHA44.25 below. SilkTork * 11:52, 24 September 2010 (UTC)
      • Just a couple of points: check "ise" vs "ize" (and derivatives - for example, is the WHO an organisation or an organization?). Second, I would suggest reading it over and doing some general copy-editing - there are other issues with grammar and clarity. Nikkimaria (talk) 14:12, 24 September 2010 (UTC)
        • As I have set all spellings to British variant, it would be an 'organisation. OTOH, the official name is spelt with a 'z'. --Ohconfucius 14:44, 24 September 2010 (UTC)
          • British spelling accepts both ise and ize, so other than proper names such as WHO, either can be used used in this article. I'll scan through for other issues with grammar and clarity - though if they are mine I am likely to miss them! I hope to pick up other people's errors, and that Ohconfucius will pick up mine! SilkTork * 15:04, 24 September 2010 (UTC)

Accuracy and verifiability

  • See here for a list of problematic links
  • Use a consistent formatting for references
  • Include retrieval dates for all web sources
  • Include publisher for all sources
  • Include page numbers for multi-page documents, journals, and newspapers (where applicable)
  • Address unreliable-source tag
  • When I try to load canadianchristianity.com, my anti-virus software sends up a warning about it being an "attack page"

Broad

  • Need more emphasis on what here is termed "Background". Are there any breakdowns of donation/transplant counts by organ? Which hospitals are equipped to perform these procedures? Any particularly well-known for transplantation surgery? Why is organ donation so contrary to Chinese culture (just a sentence needed to explain)? Also, the section should be split or renamed, as most of it deals with the 2000s, not "1960s-1984"
    • Will look into this. SilkTork * 11:33, 24 September 2010 (UTC)
    • Have made some adjustments. I am concerned about going too far though. The main notability of China's transplant programme is the organ harvesting and trade, so that has to be both the bulk and focus of the article; however to ensure balance, context neutrality, and broad coverage I have included some background detail. There is, however, a danger of downplaying the harvesting and trading if one goes too much into the other aspects. There has to be a balance, but that balance mustn't obscure what was in effect a very disturbing practise. And this article isn't about organ transplantation in general. The notability in China's programme is not the everyday transplanting, but the exceptional aspects of it. I'll be advised by you if you feel that coverage of other aspects is, though, still too little. Ensuring neutral balance isn't always easy. The face transplanting might be seen by some people as a smoke screen, so care has to be taken! SilkTork * 12:39, 24 September 2010 (UTC)
  • Conversely, the section on Falun Gong should be shortened or spun off. I realize it's an important consideration, but it shouldn't be given more weight than the two International sections combined
  • Does this article include the issue of tissue transplantation? It's mentioned in the lead, but not anywhere else
    • I have removed tissue from the lead. Organ transplantation by implication includes tissue so there is no need to highlight it. I don't think there is one common word which covers both organs and tissue, so "organ transplantation" generally covers everything. I think "organ and tissue" was used in the lead so readers would understand that "organ transplantation" does involve both organs and tissue, but if you feel it sets up an expectation that is not delivered, then it is better removed. And the article and operational practise does focus on the organs rather than tissue anyway. SilkTork * 11:21, 24 September 2010 (UTC)

Neutrality

  • Make sure you distinguish between "acknowledged" and "not denied"
    • There is one instance I can find of "acknowledged", and that accords precisely with the source, and is about trading in organs. The use of "not denied" is in taking organs from prisoners. They are related but different. One is the operation to remove organs from prisoners. The other is trading those organs on the international market. China denied they were involved in illegal trading, though did not deny they took organs from prisoners. They eventually acknowledged they not only took organs from prisoners, but also then sold those organs. I have reworded the lead to, hopefully, make this clearer. Does that help? SilkTork * 11:12, 24 September 2010 (UTC)
  • Since this is a controversial topic, be very careful about WP:W2W, WP:ASF, and WP:UNDUE
    • The reason I am involved is because of the controversy surrounding this and related Falun Gong articles - see Talk:Falun Gong/Moderated discussion. However I am not the only editor, and I don't check every edit. If there are any aspects or phrases that you feel are suspect, please indicate them so we can discuss it more fully. One of the concerns is that the Falun Gong allegation takes up a disproportionate amount of space, and should be split out per WP:Summary style into a separate article on the Kilgour-Matas report. The history of this article, however, is that any attempts to do that have been reverted. An experienced GA reviewer giving an impartial assessment of the article and reaching a decision either way regarding 3 (b) - "it stays focused on the topic without going into unnecessary detail" would be helpful. SilkTork * 11:12, 24 September 2010 (UTC)

Stability

No problems noted

Images

Response

Hi. Sorry, I didn't notice that a review was under way. I'll take a look at the points raised. Thanks for doing the review. SilkTork * 08:54, 23 September 2010 (UTC)


  • I think all the points have been addressed. Let us know if there's anything else. And thanks again for taking on this task. Not the most pleasant or easiest of articles to work through. I fully understand why it was left for so long on the GAN pile. You have done a thorough and admirable job. SilkTork *

Article's title

From the title of the article, I was expecting to read about the number of organ transplants being done, which centres (hospitals) are involved, differences in treatment regimens with the West, etc.. This article is actually about illegal organ harvesting. The title should be changed accordingly. Axl ¤ 09:47, 16 September 2010 (UTC)

There is general information on the numbers of transplants, and history and development of transplants, the local attitude toward transplants; the legal situation regarding transplants, and how this has changed over the years, and how the local attitude toward transplants is changing. There is a fair amount of general information regarding organ transplantation in China. I agree, however, that there is a weighting toward the some of the international concerns regarding organ transplantation - this, though, is appropriate, as that is the most significant aspect of the topic, and needs to be explored in reasonable depth. Where I am less certain, is the amount of material on the Falun Gong allegations - that does seen disproportionate, and should be split out per WP:Summary style; and it has long been my intention to split that out into a stand alone article. There are issues surrounding that, however. A stand alone article previously existed, and has been merged into this article - and that has been disputed, and some of the people involved in that dispute are under ArbCom sanctions. I am interested to see how an uninvolved GA reviewer would deal with 3 (b) (stays focused) of the Misplaced Pages:Good article criteria. SilkTork * 11:21, 16 September 2010 (UTC)
There is indeed some general information regarding the number of transplants, local attitudes, and the legal situation. This is all relevant background information for an article about "Illegal Organ Transplantation in China". It is entirely inadequate in an article about "Organ Transplantation in China". If I was GA reviewing this article, I would require that the article's title should be changed. If you really expected me to review this article with its current title, I would quick-fail it. It has excessive undue weight on the illegal aspects of transplantation. It has no mention of the numbers of lung transplants, heart transplants, etc.. Which hospitals is this done in? What are the indications for the various transplants? How many lung transplants are performed for cystic fibrosis? How many for emphysema? What are the drug regimens used? How long do patients survive after transplant? How does this compare with the West? Axl ¤ 09:50, 18 September 2010 (UTC)
That is a good point. Then why not change it to "Illegal Organ Harvesting in the PRC," and have another article called "Organ Transplantation in the PRC," which discusses the legitimate aspects of the Chinese trade in organs? Those two articles should be sufficient. From what I can see on the page now, FLG's sensational claims don't warrant a new article.

Another approach is to clearly break the article into parts that discuss the legitimate and illegitimate organ transplanting practices. However, the same undue weight problem may emerge, when it's discovered that there is an abundance of information on illicit practices, but little on legal ones.The Sound and the Fury (talk) 19:04, 24 September 2010 (UTC)

TheSoundAndTheFury, I agree with your first suggestion. Axl ¤ 08:41, 25 September 2010 (UTC)
Then why don't we simply do that? The Sound and the Fury (talk) 13:47, 25 September 2010 (UTC)
Look, fellers, we just got this to GA. I hope that instead of doing a premature split and end up with two stubs, I think we should build the transplantation part of this article first. --Ohconfucius 14:45, 25 September 2010 (UTC)
As I noted above, I dispute the validity of this article as a GA under its current title. Axl ¤ 08:42, 27 September 2010 (UTC)

As you are not satisfied with the explanations here, the appropriate process is to now go for a Community Reassessment per Misplaced Pages:Good article reassessment, and give your reasons why you feel the article does not meet Misplaced Pages:Good article criteria. I think the criteria you'd be saying it fails on would be either 3(a) - "it addresses the main aspects of the topic;* (*This requirement is significantly weaker than the "comprehensiveness" required of featured articles; it allows shorter articles, articles that do not cover every major fact or detail, and overviews of large topics.)" or 3(b) "it stays focused on the topic without going into unnecessary detail". Please let those involved, including the Reviewer, know if you chose to go down this route. SilkTork * 09:40, 27 September 2010 (UTC)

GA Reassessment

This discussion is transcluded from Talk:Organ transplantation in the People's Republic of China/GA2. The edit link for this section can be used to add comments to the reassessment.

I was hoping that the main editors of the article would see my point and agree to rename the article. Instead, here is my "Good Article" review, as recommended by SilkTork:-

1a. The prose is clear. The grammar and spelling are fine.

1b. The lead section is too long for the length of the whole article.

2. The article is accurate and fairly well-referenced, with good in-line citations. (The article would benefit from references to peer-reviewed medical journals such as this letter by Jiefu Huang to the Lancet, and these, but these are not required for GA status.)

3a. The article does not address the main aspects of the topic. The brief "Background" section should actually be the mainstay of the article. Information should include the numbers of different organ types, the largest hospitals where these are performed, common indications for different organ transplants, survival following transplant, complication rates, drug regimes used, and how these factors contrast with the West.

3b. The article is strongly focussed on the practice of illegal/unethical harvesting. It applies undue weight and is inappropriate for the article. This needs to be drastically reduced and/or spun-off into its own article.

4. The article is neutral.

5. Well, we do seem to have a content dispute, although we aren't engaged in an edit war.

6. The illustrations are appropriate for a GA.

Axl ¤ 09:42, 29 September 2010 (UTC)

This seems a bit of an awkward way to discuss, the article itself definitely qualifies for good article, but I agree with Axl that it should be either renamed or split. --WS (talk) 10:05, 29 September 2010 (UTC)
  • Quick comment - I'll likely have more to say later, but one point: this article is well over 15,000 characters (not counting the lead or the references), and thus per WP:LEAD should and does have a 2-3 paragraph lead. Nikkimaria (talk) 11:47, 29 September 2010 (UTC)
  • This is an individual assessment. As there has been prior discussion on this matter among those involved, and there was no agreement that the article did not meet GA criteria, this should be a community assessment. Please close this and open a community assessment which will bring in a wider range of people - most importantly, people who have not previously been involved. SilkTork * 13:59, 29 September 2010 (UTC)

When it is brought before a community assessment, I might have some comments too. The Sound and the Fury (talk) 14:33, 29 September 2010 (UTC)

Reviews

Here are a number of journal articles which could be used to improve this articles scope.

Doc James (talk · contribs · email) 23:35, 19 December 2010 (UTC)

Thanks for the list Doc James. Some of the links lead to subscription sites, and from the abstracts seem to cover what is already included in the article. This article can be read in full, and I'm not seeing much new information; indeed, it seems quite coy on certain details, and I would argue that the Misplaced Pages article contains more information. SilkTork * 09:59, 28 December 2010 (UTC)
I think it would better if someone who knows Chinese reads the original Chinese version of these articles, instead of using the translated version.--Jsjsjs1111 (talk) 09:20, 3 October 2012 (UTC)

New GAN

I am dismayed to see that SilkTork has nominated this article. While the article has improved a little since the GA review in 2010, persisent problems remain regarding criteria 3a and 3b. Axl ¤ 19:21, 19 December 2013 (UTC)

GA Review

GA toolbox
Reviewing
This review is transcluded from Talk:Organ transplantation in China/GA3. The edit link for this section can be used to add comments to the review.

Reviewer: LT910001 (talk · contribs) 09:30, 21 December 2013 (UTC)

If there are no objections, I'll take this review. I'll note at the outset I've had no role in editing or creating this article. I welcome other editors at any stage to contribute to this review. I will spend a day familiarising myself with the article and then provide an assessment. Kind regards, LT910001 (talk) 09:30, 21 December 2013 (UTC)

Hi, LT910001. Please read my concerns from the time of the previous GAN, my reassessment, community reassessment and my current comment. Thank you. Axl ¤ 10:56, 21 December 2013 (UTC)
Thanks Axl. Having a look at previous nominations, reassessments and the talk page is often my second port of call when conducting a GA review. --LT910001 (talk) 03:20, 22 December 2013 (UTC)

Thanks for waiting. In conducting this review, I will:

  • Provide an assessment using WP:GARC
  • If this article does not meet the criteria, explain what areas need improvement.
  • Provide possible solutions that may (or may not) be used to fix these.

Assessment

Rate Attribute Review Comment
1. Well-written:
1a. the prose is clear, concise, and understandable to an appropriately broad audience; spelling and grammar are correct. See below
1b. it complies with the Manual of Style guidelines for lead sections, layout, words to watch, fiction, and list incorporation.
2. Verifiable with no original research:
2a. it contains a list of all references (sources of information), presented in accordance with the layout style guideline.
2b. reliable sources are cited inline. All content that could reasonably be challenged, except for plot summaries and that which summarizes cited content elsewhere in the article, must be cited no later than the end of the paragraph (or line if the content is not in prose).
2c. it contains no original research.
3. Broad in its coverage:
3a. it addresses the main aspects of the topic. See below
3b. it stays focused on the topic without going into unnecessary detail (see summary style).
4. Neutral: it represents viewpoints fairly and without editorial bias, giving due weight to each. See below
5. Stable: it does not change significantly from day to day because of an ongoing edit war or content dispute.
6. Illustrated, if possible, by media such as images, video, or audio:
6a. media are tagged with their copyright statuses, and valid non-free use rationales are provided for non-free content.
6b. media are relevant to the topic, and have suitable captions.
7. Overall assessment.

Commentary

Thanks to the editors for working on this article. With the festive season upon us in many countries, I am more than happy to wait several days for a response. As it is, I believe this article needs improvement to meet the GARC. However I feel this improvement would be possible in a limited timespan so will not close the review. Some concerns: --LT910001 (talk) 22:36, 22 December 2013 (UTC)

  • This article is not suitably broad. As an article about "organ transplantation in China", here are some questions which arose during my review. These aren't intended to be comprehensive or prescriptive, but are intended to illustrate that this article is not suitably broad.
    • How many organ transplants have occurred in the last 5 years? How many of these were voluntary / not voluntary? What tissue types are used? How does a person voluntarily donate their organs? How does a person get on a waiting list? Is there a cost involved? Does organ donation differ between the military and civilian systems?
    • Without this information, and a portrayal of the Chinese transplantation system in general, I am concerned that the article focuses almost entirely on concerns regarding involuntary transplantation.
  • I feel, although this is not a requirement of the review, that this article would benefit from a clearer restructure, perhaps in something like "International concerns / US / China / Canada" to separate out the relevant portions. As it is it's quite hard to follow other than as a timeline. This impacts on readability. I feel with the inclusion of some extra information for context this readability issue will not be as apparent.

Please feel free to take your time responding during this season, I wish you and you family well. Kind regards, --LT910001 (talk) 22:36, 22 December 2013 (UTC)

  • Thank you for the prompt review. Your main issue is the coverage, I feel the coverage is broad enough for GA criteria. The main notability of organ transplantation in China has been covered, with appropriate weight given to the depth of coverage in reliable sources of various aspects; the main one, of course, being international concerns; some of that - the main aspects indeed - being covered in Kilgour-Matas report. I understand that it can be tricky to draw the line between the comprehensiveness demanded in a FA review and the broad coverage of a GA review - much comes down to the judgement of the reviewer. Judgement is often assisted by seeing what is covered in scholarly documents, books, news reports, etc - spending a little bit of time doing a Google of the topic to get a feel for the coverage. If you have done that independent background reading of the sources on the topic and feel the article is biased and undue, and that the coverage is not broad enough, then of course you should fail it; that is your judgement as the reviewer. No probs, and no hard feelings. SilkTork 00:31, 23 December 2013 (UTC)
This article does not meet the 'broadness' criteria required for GA promotion, and so I have failed per your comments above. I would strongly advise making some changes to the article so that this issue, as documented in the past reviews and reassessment, is addressed, before the article is renominated. I wish you well on your wiki-travels, --LT910001 (talk) 01:12, 27 December 2013 (UTC)

Copyvio?

I don't see the copyvio, but this template messed up the page. Hard to resolve a problem that is not explained. TheBlueCanoe 04:49, 27 March 2015 (UTC)

We both made edits in rapid succession here. In response to this, I now see the offending paragraph which was lifted from the news article, but there's a pretty simple solution to that problem, which is to rewrite or paraphrase it. I've done that. What needs to be oversighted and why? What am I missing? TheBlueCanoe 05:00, 27 March 2015 (UTC)
@TheBlueCanoe: I know how important this article is to Falun Gong propagandists, but you should accept it as an unfortunate consequence of one of your fellow FLG editors choosing to plagiarise an entire chunk of it. That chunk that was copied was entirely gratuitous ad I was actually looking to remove it. As I intimated in the edit summary, the current practice requires admin review plus oversight, so that the offending copyvio isn't visible in any of the diffs. So, please don't lift the tag, otherwise no admin will know to take care of it. Regards, -- Ohc  06:00, 27 March 2015 (UTC)
It's not necessary to respond to polite queries with ad hominems. Anyway, I suggest you read the template more carefully next time. It looks like there are several steps to properly initiate a copyright investigation, which includes posting a notice on the offending editor's talk page and, more importantly, filing the request at Misplaced Pages:Copyright_problems/2015 March 27. I've taken the liberty of doing that for you. Simply putting the template on the page will not automatically result in a resolution. All it does is make that section inaccessible to readers. Lastly, one need not be a "Falun Gong propagandist" to understand that the killing of religious or political prisoners for their organs is an important issue. TheBlueCanoe 02:07, 30 March 2015 (UTC)
  • Okay, so apologies for the long delay in processing this. I've investigated and found that the problem here was User:Derrickdora, whose every addition to this page was copy-pasted from his sources. Beyond the flagged section, several others remained. I rewrote one, removed most, including a section that had been revised but is also sourced to a linkvio on Wordpress. It's not reliable if you can't review the original. :/ I've reviewed every substantial edit by this guy in the article. They were all cleaned years ago by someone as poorly sourced, but that cleanup was unfortunately reverted. Even so, I don't think that rev deletion will be necessary here, as long as they don't get put back. They're fairly small overall and would have a high cost in reducing transparency, since they've been here for years. Sorry to those who are working on the article for the unexpected complication - I hope you can repair the damage he left without much difficulty! --Moonriddengirl 00:26, 26 April 2015 (UTC)

objection and update needed...

this article and the one specifically about falun gong allegations obviously needs to be updated. the deletion of a stupidly written genocide paragraph and the addition of pro-chinese government material doesn't cut the mustard. but i don't have time for that now and it will take a lot more reading until i catch up to speed on this complicated issue. I just want to register my objection, since we work on a silence=consent model on the 'pedia. it will also take some work to ensure that the articles are quite separate in content. it may come out that the history of organ transplantation in china is the history of the use of certain individuals as an organ source - or it may not. until then there should be as much separation as possible. Happy monsoon day 04:20, 27 August 2016 (UTC)

It's terrible that this article has still not been updated a year after your comment. I will make a couple of very small changes, but we need someone to do something much more substantive. StickyWikis | talk16:31, 31 August 2017 (UTC)
Clicking through articles on Xinjiang camps, claims of organ harvesting there, clicked through to this one.... and now it's three years after that comment saying it was one year! It will take way too much time to get up to speed on this issue, though. Someone needs to research this extensively. Cleopatran Apocalypse (talk) 14:11, 18 May 2020 (UTC)
I reached this article through Human trafficking in China. Actually, I have no idea how the organ trade falls under the definition of human trafficking, but that is a different issue.
Yeah, this article is a mess, and seems to have been written to drive more clicks to Falun Gong articles. In order to make it actually informative, it would be good to take as model other articles like
Verkanto (talk) 19:31, 21 December 2020 (UTC)
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