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New Foreign Relations Laws Should Scrutinise Hospital Partnerships With China

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Questioning the Universe With Wonderment: ‘Philosopher Lecturing on the Orrery’

Science, with people believing that the truths it offers are absolute, has become a source from which many people gather their beliefs. The Age of Enlightenment was a philosophical catalyst in helping science gain a foothold over religion and faith, with some of the era eventually seeing them as outdated and even harmful modes of belief. Science is always advancing, however, and the scientific truth of yesterday—despite being thought of as absolute—is often overturned by new evidence tomorrow. As science continues to develop and evolve, is there a place for those things that exist outside the domain of science, such as religion and faith? Asking these questions makes me think of a scientific artist I loved as a young boy, Joseph Wright of Derby. As an adult, however, I find myself…

New Foreign Relations Laws Should Scrutinise Hospital Partnerships With China

New laws designed to review questionable agreements with foreign entities should also cover the activities of hospitals, according to the Doctors Against Forced Organ Harvesting (DAFOH).

DAFOH warns that a current exemption in the draft laws could open the door for Australian hospitals to continue entering partnerships with overseas medical institutions linked to forced organ harvesting.

Chinese hospitals, backed by Beijing, have faced fierce scrutiny for engaging in systematic organ harvesting practices targeting prisoners of conscience (particularly Falun Gong practitioners and Uighurs Muslims).

“It is important to note that China is the only country in the world where state-sanctioned, medical genocide has occurred unabated,” DAFOH’s submission read.

New Foreign Relations Laws Should Scrutinise Hospital Partnerships With China Falun Dafa practitioners holding banners raising awareness about forced organ harvesting and bringing Jiang Zemin to justice, in Melbourne, Australia on 14 July 2018. (Daniel Cameron/NTD)

“This compromises Australia’s notable medical and ethical standards, thus directly undermining the very nature of Australia’s sovereignty,” it continued.

On Aug. 27, the federal government introduced new laws to give the foreign minister authority to review, and potentially veto, agreements between foreign entities and domestic government organisations. The Foreign Relations Bill will cover agreements entered by state and territory governments, local councils, and universities.

Experts believe controversial agreements signed with Beijing, including Victoria’s Belt and Road Initiativesister-city arrangements, and Confucius Institutes, will come under the microscope, and likely be cancelled.

Commercial organisations and hospitals are currently exempt from the Bill’s reach.

“This exemption may have serious implications, such as Australian government-funded research facilities, hospitals, and state health departments, which have entered into arrangements with Chinese hospitals [being free from scrutiny],” the DAFOH statement read.

The organisation pointed to the case of two senior medical practitioners based at Sydney’s Westmead Hospital, who signed a “letter of intent” with the Third Xiangya Hospital of Central South University based in central China.

The president of Third Xiangya Hospital has previously boasted of the hospitals ability to perform 6 to 7 transplant surgeries per day. Arne Schwarz, an independent researcher into organ harvesting claims, declared: “How is this possible without a bank of still-living donors?”

Researchers—David KilgourDavid Matas, and Ethan Gutmann—have concluded that somewhere between 60,000 and 100,000 transplants are conducted in China annually. Their belief is many of these organs come from Falun Gong practitioners.

DAFOH also cited a 2017 Memorandum of Understanding signed between New South Wales Health and Guangdong Health and Family Planning Commission.

New Foreign Relations Laws Should Scrutinise Hospital Partnerships With China A screenshot from the documentary “Killed for Organs: China’s Secret State Transplant Business.” (NTDTV)

It noted that Guangdong has 17 hospitals listed as approved transplant centres and are considered high-risk locations where organ harvesting is known to occur.

DAFOH was nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize in 2016, and is a non-profit organisation focused on raising awareness on the unethical organ transplant industry.

The Foreign Relations Bill meanwhile, has been met with criticism and opposition from the university sector, who cite possible challenges to future collaboration with overseas partners.

Michael Shoebridge of the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, has refuted these concerns saying the new laws would have little bearing on partners in friendly jurisdictions.

“The law is designed to ensure that the direction of research partnerships aligns with Australia’s foreign policy and national security interests, and close research cooperation with such partners almost certainly does so,” he told The Epoch Times.

“There will almost certainly be current or future proposed research partnerships that do not align with Australia’s foreign policy interests … some no doubt being with Chinese institutions with close connections to the Chinese government’s military and internal security apparatus …” he said.

Beijing’s military is believed to play a significant role in organ harvesting in the country.

Focus News: New Foreign Relations Laws Should Scrutinise Hospital Partnerships With China

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PG | 1h 25min | Drama, Thriller, Western | 30 July 1952 (USA) Similar to 1960’s “The Magnificent Seven,” director Fred Zinnemann’s “High Noon” (1952) is a Western about courage and standing up for what’s right, no matter the odds. And although this film shares that message, it doesn’t begin as dramatically as the later film does. “High Noon” starts off much more subtly, with shots of scruffy henchman Jack Colby (Lee Van Cleef) smoking a cigarette under a tree. Soon, he is joined by a couple of similar, devious-looking men, Jim Pierce (Robert Wilke) and Ben Miller (Sheb Wooley). The three men travel via horseback to a lone train station to await the noontime arrival of their leader, Frank Miller (Ian MacDonald). Not too far away is the dusty…