October 30, 1997 Mr. Timothy Howe ---- -------- ----- Milpitas, California 95035 Dear Mr. Howe: Thank you for your letter concerning human rights abuses in China. I am pleased to look into this matter for you, and I have asked the Department of State to consider and comment on the issues you have raised. As soon as I have a response, I will be back in touch with you. In the meantime, thanks again for contacting my office. I hope that I can be of assistance. With warmest personal regards. Sincerely yours, Dianne Feinstein United States Senator DF:mbm
Recently, I received the promised reply, which is below.
January 5, 1998 Mr. Timothy Howe ---- -------- --- Milpitas, California 95035 Dear Mr. Howe: As I advised you in an earlier letter, I referred your letter to the Department of State. I have enclosed their response. Thank you again for contacting my office. I hope that this material is helpful and that the information outlined in it will clarify the situation for you. If you have further questions regarding this, or if there is some way I can assist you in the future on other matters, please do not hesitate to contact one of my offices: San Francisco: (415) 536-6868 Los Angeles: (310) 914-7300 San Diego: (619) 231-9712 Fresno: (209) 485-7430 Washington, D.C.: (202) 224-3841 With warmest personal regards and best wishes for the holiday season. Sincerely yours, Dianne Feinstein United States Senator DF:mbm
The above letter included the following letter from the Department of State:
Dear Senator Feinstein: Thank you for your October 30 letter, in which you forwarded various constituent inquiries regarding several allegations with respect to the sale of the organs of executed convicts in China. I would like to underscore that the idea of a trade in body parts is repugnant, and the charge that prisoners would be executed to facilitate such a trade is even more abhorrent. The allegations are deeply troubling and, if proved to be true, would require us to press the Chinese government for revision of its policy. We asked the Chinese Embassy in Washington on October 22 for an authoritative statement of Chinese Government policy regarding the use of organs from executed prisoners, and our Embassy contacted the Chinese government in Beijing on October 23 to make the same request. In both cases we pressed the Chinese for a statement of Chinese policy as well as specific information about the allegations. We will continue our efforts to verify whether there is any basis in fact for these allegations that executions for organs take place, that transplants are a commodity to be traded, or that organs are taken without consent. To date, the authoratative response that we have from the Chinese is an unequivocal denial of the allegations. Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA) Press Spokesman Shen Goufang stated publicly on October 22 that the allegations were untrue. The Chinese response through governmental channels has been that Shen's October 22 statement is authoritative. Despite these assurances, we do not consider the matter closed. One of the allegations made in the program, "PrimeTime Live," was that two individuals in the United States acted as brokers to facilitate the trade in organs from executed convicts. The Justice Department has referred the issue to the FBI for investigation as to whether U.S. laws have been violated. We will follow closely this investigation. We hope the above information is helpful. Please let us know if we can be of any further assistance. Sincerely, Barbara Larkin Assistant Secretary Legislative Affairs