The truth behind so many missing children in China who can never be found is too terrifying

Human traffickers openly snatching people in broad daylight on the street — this kind of thing happens frequently in China now. (Video screenshot)

[People News] Liu Duojia, a 17-year-old senior high school girl from No. 5 Middle School in Shangzhi City, Heilongjiang Province, went missing on the evening of October 26 while on her way home after evening self-study. Recently, her body was found under a bridge. 

On the morning of November 6, staff from the local police station responded that the girl had been found. When asked, “Is she okay?”, the officer said, “It’s not convenient to disclose.” 

Many netizens are questioning: What was the reason for her disappearance? Why are the details of the discovery of the body not made public? “She just inexplicably died?” “Yeah, they just casually announce her death like that??” “Was there any reason for the disappearance? Why doesn’t anyone allow a forensic autopsy?” “I’m curious, don’t the family members even check if there’s anything unusual about the body?” “Even if they checked, they’d never be allowed to post it. On Douyin (TikTok) I keep seeing boys going missing every day.” “Organs again?” “Taken for parts again?”

What is shocking is that recently in China, the number of missing persons has surged dramatically — it is far from just Liu Duojia alone.

On November 5, a list circulated on overseas social platforms revealed that in just 22 days of October, there were 107 missing persons cases in China, the vast majority of whom were children. The youngest was only 5 years old, and the oldest was 56.

According to a 2013 report by China National Radio, approximately 200,000 children go missing in China every year, and only 0.1% are successfully recovered.

According to estimates from network security research institutions, after 2021, China has 700 million surveillance cameras — roughly one camera for every two people.

So here's the question: China has 700 million cameras and the world's most advanced Skynet surveillance system. Why then can't so many missing children be found?

This can't help but make people suspect that there is a huge, unspeakable dark secret behind it. And the truth is indeed so.

Eric MY, an anti-communist righteous person from a county-level city in Jiangsu Province, once worked at the law enforcement case handling center of the local public security bureau (under the public security brigade). In an interview with The Epoch Times in July this year, he exposed the truth: so many children go missing not because the government cannot find them, but because they fundamentally do not look for them at all.

Eric said that under the CCP's advanced big data surveillance, every Chinese person is transparent. Every word, action, and even online shopping behavior is monitored by the authorities. He has handled several cases of lost children. Generally, they don't deal with the child's issue — they deal with the parents' issue. For example, when a child is lost and the parents report it to the police station, the police usually refuse to accept the case, or even if they accept it, they never find the child. If the parents try to petition or complain, they themselves will be sent to the case handling center.

"According to normal case-handling procedures, we would definitely report to the legal affairs office for approval, then use big data to search — there is no one we can't find. Even if the child is sent to the ends of the earth, we can find out where they are. There are too many public security surveillance cameras in China — tens of millions. If we want to find someone, we can. Whether it's a child or an adult, as long as we have their photo or name — just one of them — the Skynet system automatically checks their location. All cameras nationwide are monitoring; it finds the person in less than 5 seconds. Really.

"Why can't they be found? I'll tell you: it's because they've all been harvested for organs. This is absolutely true. Out of sympathy, we would ask our leaders: 'Should we check Skynet?' The leaders won't allow it. The legal affairs office forbids you from searching. How can you search then? If we do search, we take responsibility.

"Because the entity conducting the organ harvesting is the government itself. The government is directing it, so the higher-ups won't let you investigate. Under normal reporting procedures, of course we could find them. Even if the person was reduced to ashes, we could know exactly where they were turned to ashes. It's impossible not to find them. But if the person is a bit older — 30 or 40 years old, say someone with mental issues who wandered off — then we can search. But children? Absolutely not allowed to search. Teenagers' organs are the most valuable. Teenagers' organs are the healthiest."

"In plain terms, most people in China should be able to understand this: when you have nowhere to hide, why can't they find the children? It's because a mysterious power prevents them from looking. Anyone who uses their brain to think about it can figure it out. We don't even need to expose this — it's no longer a secret. The CCP boasts of having 100 million party members; a certain proportion of ordinary people must be used to sustain it."

Thus, China has 700 million cameras and the world's most advanced surveillance system, yet so many missing children cannot be found. This proves at least two things:

First, live organ harvesting is indeed a systematic operation directed by the government;

Second, all those cameras are not there to serve the people — they are there to maintain stability. △