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Anti-Fraud Blogger Reveals Chilling Organ-Harvesting Pipeline in Cambodia

An anti-fraud whistleblower alleges that young jobseekers lured to Cambodia are being funneled into a covert organ-harvesting pipeline, beginning with fake medical exams, forced drug regimens, and ending in the systematic removal and resale of their organs
Published: January 29, 2026
A senior lawyer has said it’s the duty of the UN Human Rights Council to address state-sanctioned organ harvesting in China. (Image: Piron Guillaume / Unsplash)

By Cai Siyun, Vision Times

A masked anti-fraud blogger has issued a shocking new exposé alleging that young jobseekers lured to Cambodia are being funneled into a covert organ-harvesting pipeline, beginning with fraudulent “pre-employment medical exams” and ending with the systematic removal and resale of nearly every organ in their bodies. Multiple sources claim that Chinese biotech firms and rogue physicians are implicated, profiting from a network embedded within Southeast Asia’s scam-compound economy.

The whistleblower, previously known for exposing the so-called “Cambodia Life Sciences Institute,” said criminal syndicates advertise high-paying overseas jobs to attract victims, primarily from China. Once in Cambodia, recruits are told they must undergo medical examinations as part of onboarding. In reality, the exams are used to screen for “high-quality parts,” those without infectious disease or genetic defects, preparing victims for organ extraction.

RELATED: Forced Organ Harvesting Began Over 20 Years Ago in China, Says Whistleblower

Alarming claims

According to the blogger, individuals selected during screening are falsely told they have health issues and must undergo treatment before starting work. They are then forced to take anti-rejection drugs for 45 days, a preparation step designed to reduce transplant rejection when organs are removed.

Victims’ medical profiles are entered into a database and matched globally. Once a recipient is identified, both parties take the same anti-rejection medication, and on a predetermined date, the victims are sent to hospitals to wait. The blogger described what follows as a “one-stop dismantling.”

A blogger specializing in exposing scams has revealed that young people going to Cambodia in search of work opportunities are being tricked into undergoing medical examinations to have their organs harvested and sold in the black market. (Image: Online Screenshot)

From the heart and kidneys to eyeballs, lungs, skin, and more, the entire body is rapidly stripped of parts, which are then delivered to pre-arranged hospitals and transplanted into multiple buyers.

Because the organs come from healthy young people who have been pre-treated with anti-rejection drugs, the blogger claimed, they command far higher prices than organs obtained through sudden extractions elsewhere.

Targeting the young

The primary targets are reportedly people under 25, with recent expansion to 15–17-year-olds, who are seen as easier to control due to inexperience. Southeast Asian anti-fraud activists have previously warned that Chinese-branded “biotech companies” have set up labs inside scam compounds in Cambodia and Myanmar, fronts for organ trafficking. One source said more than 20 organs can be sold from a single body.

Insiders allege the surgeons involved often possess doctoral-level credentials, with a single harvesting procedure costing up to $150,000. Observers have long cautioned that firms marketing themselves as Chinese biotech enterprises are operating inside scam parks, conducting illegal organ trade under the guise of research.

Public concern intensified after a physician affiliated with the Second Affiliated Hospital of Zhejiang University School of Medicine reportedly stated in an annual report that he personally traveled to the China–Myanmar border to procure organs, claiming to have obtained hundreds of lung donors in a single year. The disclosure sparked heated debate on Chinese social media.

RELATED: Zhengzhou’s Underground Organ Transplant Network and the CCP’s Role in it

In recent years, numerous young Chinese have gone missing after being trafficked to scam compounds in Cambodia and Myanmar. In July last year, Ye Wenbin, a 19-year-old from Shangrao, Jiangxi, was reportedly sold to a Cambodian scam park. His mother, Ms. Fei, ultimately secured his release after protracted efforts.

Following clashes between Thailand and Cambodia late last year, Thai forces launched large-scale raids, exposing Chinese-run casinos and scam hubs.

An X account called “News Investigation” claimed that the Cambodia Life Sciences Institute publicly listed its collaborators, naming multiple Chinese public hospitals and research institutions, including Xiangya Hospital of Central South University, Xiangya Second Hospital (previously implicated by whistleblower Luo Shuaiyu), Hunan Normal University, the Wuhan Institute of Virology, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, and Beijing Boao Biotechnology Group.

The list also included entities labeled “children’s bone-marrow extraction centers,” “stem-cell anti-aging,” and “regenerative medicine.”

Babies, bone marrow, and ‘waste disposal’

The masked blogger previously alleged that the Cambodia Life Sciences Institute operates inside a scam compound controlled by the Prince Group. He claimed trafficked women were impregnated via IVF, their babies sold to the institute for spinal-fluid extraction to produce regenerative stem-cell products marketed to billionaires.

RELATED: ‘A Younger Heart’: Viral Doctor Video Sparks Organ Harvesting Fears in China

The institute is suspected of being linked to Hunan Yuanpin Cell Biotechnology Co., Ltd., a firm said to work closely with Hunan authorities and to have collaborated with Xiangya Second Hospital, long accused of involvement in forced organ harvesting.

As online scams become harder to run, the blogger said, many scam parks are pivoting to “biotechnology.” Initially targeting young women, the operations have reportedly expanded to include women aged 16 to 50, including those over 40 who have not yet reached menopause. He further alleged the existence of “bone-marrow extraction centers” adjacent to “human reproduction centers,” along with “waste-material processing facilities.”

Another Southeast Asia blogger claimed multiple Chinese biotech firms are involved and that children raised within these facilities are periodically drained of spinal fluid, rarely surviving beyond age six.

Online sleuths say satellite and map searches once revealed compounds along the Myanmar–Thailand border labeled “children’s bone-marrow extraction center,” “human reproduction center,” and “waste processing.” Those labels have since disappeared, suggesting records were scrubbed amid public scrutiny.

Public information indicates that dozens of Chinese-run scam compounds dot border regions of Myanmar and Cambodia. Critics allege ties to elite interests and Belt and Road projects, with operations spanning telecom fraud and industrial-scale organ harvesting.

Editorial note: This article is based on publicly circulating reports and commentary from independent analysts. The claims described have not been independently verified by Vision Times, and relevant authorities have not publicly confirmed the allegations.