Strict laws for organ transplants practised in China (AFP) Updated: 2006-03-03 09:35
China said it had "rigorous" laws in place for organ transplants, in its
first official reaction to reports that Japanese and Malaysians had died from
botched Chinese surgeries.
"In respect to organ transplants, China has rigorous laws and regulations,"
foreign ministry spokesman Qin Gang told a regular briefing.
"Donors, recipients and hospitals must all firmly follow laws and regulations
in this area."
His comments came one day after Malaysian media said a number of Malaysian
patients had gone to China for transplant operations and died there or after
returning home due to complications.
Malaysia's The New Straits Times said that many of the Malaysians who went to
China for transplants were elderly, unwell, and unsuited for major surgery.
Japan's health ministry said Monday it was investigating human organ
transplants in China after a report that at least seven Japanese died due to
treatment there.
Jiji Press news agency said the patients were in their 30s to 50s and died in
Shanghai, the northeastern city of Shenyang and the southern city of Changsha
from early 2004 to February this year.
China has an increasingly lucrative transplant industry but it is tainted by
allegations that the organs of executed prisoners are harvested and sold to
hospitals.
China's health ministry has declined to comment on the reports, saying the
official in charge would only be available next week.
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