The CCP ask for applause for its double lung transplant on a coronavirus victim. But the fact that two matching lungs were found in a few days raises new suspicions of organ harvesting, just as London’s China Tribunal releases his final judgment.
Ruth Ingram
A Double Virus in Xinjiang: COVID-19 and CCP’s Fake News
As coronavirus spreads to the martyred region, the CCP claims again, falsely, that all inmates have been released and the epidemics is under control there. It isn’t.
“Yes, Torture Is Used in China”: A Church of Almighty God Refugee in Spain Speaks Out
Brother Zhang Wenbo tells Bitter Winter how he was suspended on a rope, beaten with a steel tube, and burned with cigarettes. His only crime? Preaching a banned religion.
Longing for the Spring: The Uyghur Poets Who Denounce the CCP
At home, where intellectuals are hunted down and arrested, or in the diaspora, literature keeps alive the flame of freedom and exposes the evil of the persecution.
London Protests Against CCP Atrocities
Uyghur and Tibetan exiles, Hong Kong students and their supporters gathered in their hundreds in front of the Chinese Embassy in London to denounce the CCP.
Demolishing Graveyards in Xinjiang: Even Dead Uyghurs Are Now Persecuted
After CNN revealed the CCP’s destruction of Uyghur cemeteries, Chinese propaganda claimed these were just fake news. Uyghur poet Aziz Isa Elkun tells us the true story.
Missing Uyghurs Do Not Reappear: The Case of the Hamdullah Family
The CCP campaigns claiming that the Uyghurs who disappeared are now safely home is a lie, as proved by the case of two prominent Uyghur businessmen and their relatives.
How the CCP Lies About Xinjiang: The Story of Eziz
After football star Mesut Özil dared to protest, Beijing has launched a new offensive to persuade the world that Uyghurs are not persecuted. These are just more fake news.
The Perils of The Church of Almighty God – 2
A British researcher meets with refugees who escaped China and now live in England (second in a series of two articles).
The Perils of The Church of Almighty God – 1
A British researcher encounters a book about a persecuted Christian religious movement in China (1 in a series of two articles)









