Arizona House Passes Bill to Counter Beijing’s Forced Organ Harvesting Crimes

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‘We were really sending a message to say, Arizona’s not going to take part in this in any way, shape or form,’ state Rep. Leo Biasiucci said.
The Arizona House on Feb. 20 passed a bill aimed at taking a stance against Beijing’s systematic forced organ harvesting crimes. The bill now advances to the state Senate.
The bill allows insurance providers, including subscription contracts, health care services organizations, disability insurers, and the state’s Medicaid agency to limit or deny coverage for a patient who chooses to receive an organ transplant from China.
“We were really sending a message to say, Arizona’s not going to take part in this in any way, shape, or form,” the bill’s lead sponsor, state Rep. Leo Biasiucci, said in a House Health and Human Services meeting on Feb. 3.
Biasiucci decided to split the measure into two when he reintroduced the proposals this year.
He described the anti-forced organ harvesting bill as “simple—black and white.”
Kelley Currie, a human rights lawyer and former U.S. ambassador to the U.N. Economic and Council, joined Biasiucci during the Feb. 3 meeting.
“Arizona taxpayers should not subsidize or in any way encourage this macabre form of medical tourism that supports and subsidize repression, endangers patients, and encourages the most heinous form of abuse,” she said.
“You basically are purchasing an organ on demand,” Currie said. “You can schedule your appointment, you pay cash, and then go and have your surgery.”
According to prosecutors, the doctor helped arrange for at least 10 Taiwanese patients to either have illegal kidney or liver transplant surgery in two Chinese cities.
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