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		China to end use of prisoners' organs for 
		transplants next month 
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		[December 05, 2014] 
		BEIJING (Reuters) - China, the only 
		country that still systematically takes organs from executed prisoners 
		for use in transplant operations, plans to end the controversial 
		practice from next month, a state-run newspaper said on Friday. | 
        
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			 The government has over the last year flagged plans to end the 
			practice, which has drawn criticism from rights groups, who have 
			accused authorities of taking many organs without consent from 
			prisoners or their families, a claim Beijing has denied. 
 The official China Daily said that human organ transplants will from 
			Jan. 1 rely on voluntary public donations and on donations from 
			living relatives.
 
 "Harvesting organs from executed prisoners for transplants is 
			controversial, despite written consent being required from donors 
			and their relatives," Huang Jiefu, head of the China Organ Donation 
			Committee, was quoted as saying.
 
 "The Chinese government has always been resolute in making efforts 
			to end such a practice," added Huang, a former vice health minister. 
			"Donations by the public should be the only source of organs for 
			transplants."
 
			 
			Supply of human organs falls far short of demand in China, due in 
			part to a traditional belief that bodies should be buried or 
			cremated intact. An estimated 300,000 patients are wait-listed every 
			year for organ transplants, and only about one in 30 ultimately 
			receives a transplant.
 That shortage has fueled the illegal trade in organs, and in 2007 
			the government banned transplants from living donors, except for 
			spouses, blood relatives and step- or adopted family members.
 
			
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			"The most severely ill get donations under the system, regardless of 
			their social status and wealth," Huang said. "Judicial departments 
			are not entitled to decide where the organ donations go." 
			China does not publish the numbers of people it executes, though the 
			World Coalition Against the Death Penalty, a grouping of more than 
			150 non-government bodies, bar associations and other groups, 
			estimates it was about 3,000 last year.
 (Reporting by Ben Blanchard; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)
 
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