Inside China’s Organ Harvesting Nightmare
Read an advanced review of VOC Fellow Ethan Gutman’s new book, the Xinjiang Procedure, by Phil Hall of the Epoch Times.
Any reader who comes to Ethan Gutmann’s “The Xinjiang Procedure” needs to be warned that this book offers a horror scenario more intense and severe than any terror-tinged work by Stephen King. It also provides the most brilliantly researched and intensely described study of a communist regime at war against its population since Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn’s “The Gulag Archipelago.”
Unlike King’s novels, “The Xinjiang Procedure” presents a true-life horror story of imprisoned and enslaved people whose bodies are defiled for a lucrative organ-harvesting economy. In the spirit of Solzhenitsyn’s towering work, Gutmann details the vile culture of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) in its systematic torture and murder of Falun Gong practitioners, Uyghur Muslims, Christians who worship in unsanctioned “House” churches, ethnic Kazakhs, and Tibetans in the Xinjiang province.
The actions described in this book represent a deranged and vile environment unlike anything else happening in today’s world. Gutmann first focused on this egregious human rights abuse in his 2014 book, “The Slaughter.”
Any reader who comes to Ethan Gutmann’s “The Xinjiang Procedure” needs to be warned that this book offers a horror scenario more intense and severe than any terror-tinged work by Stephen King. It also provides the most brilliantly researched and intensely described study of a communist regime at war against its population since Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn’s “The Gulag Archipelago.”
Unlike King’s novels, “The Xinjiang Procedure” presents a true-life horror story of imprisoned and enslaved people whose bodies are defiled for a lucrative organ-harvesting economy. In the spirit of Solzhenitsyn’s towering work, Gutmann details the vile culture of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) in its systematic torture and murder of Falun Gong practitioners, Uyghur Muslims, Christians who worship in unsanctioned “House” churches, ethnic Kazakhs, and Tibetans in the Xinjiang province.
The actions described in this book represent a deranged and vile environment unlike anything else happening in today’s world. Gutmann first focused on this egregious human rights abuse in his 2014 book, “The Slaughter.”