China: Forced Organ Harvesting, Evidence Mounts, Church Remains Almost Silent

Ongoing story : Chine : l'Église souterraine sous le contrôle du Parti· Part 3/3

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China: Forced Organ Harvesting, Evidence Mounts, Church Remains Almost Silent
Illustration : Marie Yukimura Saitō

Twenty years of convergent reports, a judicial ruling, figures. The Vatican diplomacy, caught in the 2018 agreement, remains silent. The magisterium, however, is not ambiguous.

Context

Genethique published on July 17, 2026, a worrying state of affairs: evidence of forced organ harvesting from prisoners of conscience in the People's Republic of China is mounting, and calls for action are multiplying in parliaments and NGOs. The victims, documented for twenty years, come mainly from Falun Gong, Uyghurs from Xinjiang, Christians from house churches, and Tibetan dissidents. What is new is the convergence of reports and the gradual crossing of the threshold of judicial recognition.

The Facts

The China Tribunal, chaired by Sir Geoffrey Nice in London, concluded in its final judgment of June 17, 2019, that forced organ harvesting from prisoners of conscience in China had occurred and continued on a large scale, the main source being Falun Gong practitioners. The work of Ethan Gutmann, David Kilgour, and David Matas quantifies the activity in tens of thousands of annual transplants, with waiting times incompatible with a voluntary donation system. China remains, according to Open Doors 2026, 15th in the world for the persecution of Christians.

Doctrinal Analysis

The Catechism of the Catholic Church teaches in number 2296 that organ transplantation is in accordance with moral law if the damage and risks incurred by the donor are proportional to the good sought in the recipient, and that the donation of organs after death is a noble act if it is based on the explicit consent of the donor or their heirs. It is not morally acceptable otherwise. The instruction Donum vitae (Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, February 22, 1987) recalls that the dignity of the person extends to the corpse itself, and prohibits any instrumentalization. Harvesting an organ without consent, a fortiori by killing, constitutes a crime.

Stakes for the Church and the Faithful

The question goes beyond China alone. It raises the responsibility of Western surgeons who participate in exchange programs, that of pharmaceutical laboratories that sell immunosuppressants in China, and that of patients tempted by transplantation tourism. Passive complicity is real. Several Asian bishops have taken a public stand, the European episcopates remain, on this file, very much in the background.

Critical Reading and Blind Spots

The relative silence of the Vatican is an embarrassing blind spot. The provisional agreement of 2018, renewed, obliges the diplomacy of the Holy See to be cautious on subjects that touch Chinese sovereignty. The question must be asked: is the canonical recognition of bishops paid for by silence on crimes against humanity? We had already noted, regarding the release of Pastor Ezra Jin Mingri in July, that no structural easing was emerging for the underground Church.

To Reflect and Act

We pray for the victims of Falun Gong, the Uyghurs, and the house churches. We ask our legislators for provisions prohibiting transplantation from untraceable sources, and our bishops for a clear word.

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Pierre-Antoine VasseurSenior Reporter, Universal Church & Persecutions
Senior reporter, regular contributor to Aid to the Church in Need and Open Doors.
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