WASHINGTONâAs U.S. and China delegations convene in Beijing, a bipartisan panel of lawmakers is casting a spotlight on the regimeâs forced organ harvesting, saying itâs past time to put the abuse to an end.
A conversation was captured between Chinese leader Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin as they walked together, musing about living to 150 through continued organ transplants.
âThat was not macabre small talk among aging dictators,â Smith said at the hearing. âIt was a glimpse behind the curtainâa glimpse into a world where human beings can be treated as interchangeable parts to prolong the lives of autocrats.â
Smith called what the leaders discussed âmurder masquerading as medicine.â
Thirty years after Smithâs first hearing on the topic of organ harvesting, the evidence has become âmore disturbing, more detailed, and more compelling,â he said, as religious and ethnic groupsâincluding Falun Gong practitioners, Uyghurs, Tibetans, and Christiansâface greater risk.
Though Beijing now insists that its transplant system conforms to international standards, he said, âextraordinaryâ eyewitness accounts reviewed by his commission say otherwise.
âEnough Is Enoughâ
One testimony came from Seyed Alireza Motevalian, an Iranian-born refugee and businessman in China. As recently as 2021, he saw unconscious, restrained Chinese prisoners brought in on stretchers and sent to surgery rooms in prison hospitals, never to returnâa repeated pattern he linked to organ harvesting.
Kalbinur Sidik, who worked as a Chinese-language teacher in Uyghur detention camps in Xinjiang, testified that she saw blood drawn from detainees every week. The detainees were then given injections of unidentified substances and small white pills that the Chinese nurses described as nutrition supplements, she said. Healthy men disappeared.
Sidik said the special police officer and driver who escorted her said the authorities had converted a local detoxification center into an organ extraction hospital.

Kalbinur Sidik, survivor of Chinaâs genocide and eyewitness to forced labor camps and author of forthcoming book âHeart Full of Light: Love, Loss, and Survival Inside China’s Gulags,â testifies online from the Netherlands, before the Congressional-Executive Commission on China on Capitol Hill in Washington on May 14, 2026. Madalina Kilroy/The Epoch Times
âThey said, âRight now in our country, the halal organ trade is booming,ââ she said via a translator.
âHalal organsâ are reportedly taken from Muslim ethnic minorities and marketed to wealthy Muslims.
âThese are Nazi-like atrocities that are being committed in 2026âitâs getting worse,â Smith told The Epoch Times. âThe American public, we all need to mobilize and say, âEnough is enough. This has got to stop.ââ
âThese figures donât appear to be real data from real donations. Theyâre numbers generated using an equation,â said study author Matthew Robertson, a doctoral student at the Australian National University.
The researchers also compared the figures with data from 50 other countries in a database managed by the World Health Organization and found that none of the other countriesâ datasets fit any formula.
Ethan Gutmann, investigative journalist and author of the âXinjiang Procedure,â was one of three hearing witnesses who have written books on the issue.

Ethan Gutmann, a China studies research fellow at the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation and author of âThe Xinjiang Procedure,â testifies before the Congressional-Executive Commission on China on Capitol Hill in Washington on May 14, 2026. Madalina Kilroy/The Epoch Times
He estimated the average age of victims to be 28.
Smith said he finds that difficult to comprehend.
âThese are young people with great futures. Theyâre very healthy,â and the Chinese authorities âkill them to get their organs,â he said in the interview.
His thoughts then returned to the hot mic moment.
If Xi needs a new liver, Smith said, the Chinese leader will âlook to the very people he despises, like the Falun Gong or like the Uyghurs.â
âExtractable Body Partsâ
Last May, the House passed two billsâthe Falun Gong Protection Act and Smithâs Stop Forced Organ Harvesting Actâaiming to impose sanctions on forced organ harvesting perpetrators. Both now await further movement in the Senate.
Rep. James Walkinshaw (D-Va.), coming out of the hearing, said he hopes the Senate will take action.
Beijing is âusing forced organ harvesting as a tool of repression in their repression toolbox, and itâs really important for the United States not to let those kinds of human rights issues slip off of the agenda,â he told The Epoch Times.

Rep. James Walkinshaw (D-Va.) speaks during a hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington on May 14, 2026. Madalina Kilroy/The Epoch Times
The issue should be ânear the topâ of the U.S. policy agenda on China, he said.
âWe have important issues to discuss with China, around trade, around technology, around security, all of those things are important,â he said.
âBut if we donât have a robust global human rights framework that can protect the freedoms, the religious freedoms, the political freedoms of every person on the planet, then all those other conversations arenât very meaningful, are they?â
Rep. Dale Strong (R-Ala.) similarly said the issue needs to be brought to the forefront.
âIllegal harvesting of body parts shouldnât be occurring in any country,â he told The Epoch Times. âWeâre exposing some things here that need to be exposedâshould have been exposed a long time ago.â
As the United States, âbuilt on a foundational belief and the God-given right of every individual,â celebrates its 250th anniversary, the Chinese Communist Party rejects this truth at its core, he said at the hearing.

Jan Jekielek, Epoch Times senior editor and author of “Killed to Order” testifies before the Congressional-Executive Commission on China on Capitol Hill in Washington on May 14, 2026. Madalina Kilroy/The Epoch Times
âIt views its own citizens not as people with dignity, but as a collection of extractable body parts,â he said, and it looks at Americans through âexactly the same lens.â
âKilled to order is just kind of the norm of how transplantation is done … theyâve written that into their scientific methods,â Jekielek said in an interview.
If Washington intends to confront the issue, Jekielek has a suggestion.
âPresident Trump likes to have great relationships with a lot of Americaâs prime antagonists,â he said in an interview. In that spirit, he said, the U.S. president could approach it by asking his Chinese counterpart whether or not he wants this on his legacy.
âDoes he want his legacy as the ruler of China to be forced organ harvestingâthis atrocity and evil yet to be seen on this planet?â
âNo More Free Passâ
Hearing witness Sam Brownback, former ambassador-at-large for international religious freedom and author of the just-published âChinaâs War on Faith,â said the biggest takeaway from the event should be âno more free pass.â
âChina doesnât get a pass anymore,â he told The Epoch Times.
If the regime insists on being a âhardcore authoritarian communist countryâ and committing atrocities, he said, Washington should take the same confrontational stance that it took with the Soviet Union.
Such stories need to get out, Brownback said.

Amb. Sam Brownback, former U.S. Ambassador-at-Large of International Religious Freedom, testifies before the Congressional-Executive Commission on China on Capitol Hill in Washington on May 14, 2026. Madalina Kilroy/The Epoch Times
âYou need somebody to pull a shirt up and show you, âhereâs the cut,â so that people can see this has happened,â he said. âYou need to go through the numbers.â
âThe CCP is conducting three religious genocides as we speakâagainst Tibetan Buddhists, Uyghur Muslims, and Falun Gong practitioners,â he said at the hearing.
Smith noted the massive profit the regime gleans from the illicit organ trade.
âWeâve got to shut it off with a tourniquet, shut it down completely,â he said, urging the Senate to take up on the issue.
âFor the victim who tomorrow is going to be slaughtered for their organs, delay is denial,â he added. âI canât say it strong enough. We donât have a moment to lose.â

Rep. Chris Smith (R-N.J.), co-chair of the Congressional-Executive Commission on China, during a hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington on May 14, 2026. Madalina Kilroy/The Epoch Times
And on one part there would be broad bipartisan agreement, he said at the hearing.
âNo one wants Xi Jinping or Vladimir Putin to live forever.â

