Child Disappearance Waves Erupt in Many Regions, Suspected to Be Related to Live Organ Harvesting

Every year across the country, countless children are kidnapped and trafficked. Although China has the largest number of surveillance cameras in the world, once a person goes missing, they often cannot be found. (Video screenshot)

[People News] Recently, a large number of videos have appeared on the Chinese internet exposing cases in many provinces and cities where young citizens, middle school students, and children are abducted in broad daylight. Online and on streets and towns across various provinces and cities, “missing person” posters are everywhere, yet the Chinese Communist Party authorities turn a blind eye. Public anger has been ignited, and grassroots voices are calling for a “Parts Defense War.”

On January 8, in Xincai County, Henan Province, a 13-year-old boarding middle school student surnamed Zhu suddenly died. Because the parents reacted quickly and blocked the ambulance that was attempting to transport their son’s body, all of the child’s organs were preserved. However, the parents discovered two holes in the left side of their son’s chest and inferred that the child’s death was related to live organ harvesting. The needle punctures were suspected to be injections of “preservatives” for organs. This incident triggered massive public outrage locally, with many citizens spontaneously gathering at the school to support the parents in seeking justice.

However, after this incident, multiple cases of missing teenagers occurred one after another in the area. The outside world suspects that because the Zhu child’s organs were preserved, newly missing children were abducted as “backup” organs.

According to information circulating on the Chinese internet, just at the end of last year, within a short period of time, the number of missing middle school students exceeded one hundred, and the number of missing young children was even higher. Some children were taken directly from the doorsteps of their homes by passing vehicles in broad daylight; some disappeared simply after going out to take out the trash. Some videos show criminals even rushing into small shops and abducting young clerks who were tending the stores alone…

According to multiple media outlets and sources, in many cases where missing teenagers were later found dead, the final ruling was “death by drowning,” and the possibility of a criminal case was ruled out. The “coincidences” in these multiple incidents have also caused unease in Chinese society.

According to media reports, a 19-year-old youth surnamed Chen went missing on December 9, 2025, while traveling in Luoyang. His family said the teenager was not introverted and had previously traveled alone to Guangdong. Before his disappearance, he had even called his grandmother to say he had boarded the train home. After a month-long search, rescue personnel found his body on January 9 in the middle section of the Luo River. Although police reports stated that his death “conformed to the characteristics of drowning” and ruled out a criminal case, and claimed that the family had “no objections” to the cause of death, the online comment sections were still full of doubts. Netizens repeatedly questioned: “Why is it that every time a child goes missing, they are eventually found in water?”

In Heilong Town, Henan, it was also reported that a 13-year-old boy surnamed Wang went missing on the morning of the 12th while on his way to school. His body was found the next day three kilometers from his home. According to sources, the boy’s corneas and kidneys were missing.

Former Chinese Communist Party Vice Minister of Health Huang Jiefu once boasted in an interview that China has “multiple backup living people” when performing organ transplants, to avoid accidents during the harvesting process. Huang Jiefu’s remarks were shocking and led netizens to sarcastically joke that “the best way to protect children is to contract AIDS.”

An X account named “Israel War” even quoted content from Chinese crosstalk: “If the old car can’t be fixed, just take parts from someone else’s new car and replace them,” to satirize the current phenomenon of “organ transplantation” in Chinese society.

In just the first two weeks of 2026, cases of disappearances and suspicious causes of death across China have erupted throughout Hebei, Shandong, Anhui, Sichuan, and other regions.

In Zhucheng, Shandong, a 13-year-old boy surnamed Zou went missing after getting off a vehicle at noon on January 12. His family accused surveillance cameras of “just happening to be broken” at the critical moment.

In Huaining, Anhui, a 17-year-old senior high school student surnamed Wang Tian went missing on January 7 and has remained without any news to this day.

At Tianjin Minzu Middle School, a boy surnamed Wang jumped from a building after being unable to endure extreme treatment by teachers. His family accused the school of moving the scene and falsifying the floor from which he jumped in order to cover up the truth.

In December, a parent searching for a missing family member even came forward to say that they received a phone call from local police instructing them to stop continuing to post missing-person notices. At Shanghai’s Gucun Park, parents searching for relatives were also stopped face-to-face by police from continuing to distribute missing-person notices.

After a student disappearance case at Chengdu University in Sichuan, parents who hung banners at the school gate searching for their child were driven away by police. Even though the parents knelt down and begged the police to show mercy, they were ultimately taken away in police vehicles. Police also dispersed onlookers and demanded that students at the scene delete photos from their mobile phones.

Some bloggers reported that many parents from Henan searching for missing children called on Henan people to help repost missing-child videos, but were met with public opinion controls. A blogger said: “I’ve opened my phone these past two days, and the screen is full of people asking ‘Where are the people from Henan? Where are the people from Henan?’ The people from Henan are here! It’s not that we don’t care or don’t speak up—it’s that we can’t post it. I edited several videos (reposting missing-person videos), but they just can’t be posted.”

Some Chinese netizens said that after entering 2026, information about missing children on the Chinese internet has become even more concentrated. Especially in Henan Province, missing students and children seem to occur more frequently than in other regions. Therefore, some Henan netizens suspect that these cases are related to the newly emerging cell and genetic engineering industry chain in the Zhengzhou port area.

Chinese Communist Party state media reported multiple times last year that in the Zhengzhou Airport Economy Zone in Henan, the government has been actively promoting a cell and gene therapy industry chain, with many companies emerging under the banner of medicine that are related to cell and gene engineering. Chinese netizens speculate that the recent large number of missing students in Henan Province is related to the start of operations of this gene industry chain.

When a government mobilizes the machinery of the state to back live organ transplantation, all Chinese people become human mines. Just like male actor Yu Menglong, who was tightly controlled by his management company for 12 years and could neither escape nor run away. △