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3 Ambulances For One Injury? Tangshan Crash Sparks Fears of Organ Trafficking

As similar incidents spread across social media, the episode reflects growing mistrust and anxiety, along with renewed scrutiny of China’s organ donation system and ongoing allegations surrounding the country’s sinister transplant industry
Published: February 6, 2026
Russia's largest chemical plant, Dimitrievsky Chemical Plant, burned the same day a missile production Aerospace Defense Force site in Tver burned.
A file photo of French ambulances donated to Ukraine on April 18, 2022. Just a day after Russia showcased its new RS-28 Sarmat ICBM, the country’s largest chemical plant suffered a massive fire. Additionally, a critical Aerospace Defense Force facility alleged to manufacture S-400 and Iskander missiles burned until the roof collapsed. (Image: DANIEL MIHAILESCU/AFP via Getty Images)

By Li Muzi, Vision Times

A minor traffic accident in China’s Tangshan, Hebei Province, has triggered a wave of online backlash after three ambulances reportedly arrived at the scene despite only one person being injured. According to multiple eyewitness accounts, the incident occurred on the evening of Feb. 5 near the Qian’an Olympic Sports Center in Tangshan. Witnesses claimed it was a small-scale crash with a single injured person, yet “three ambulances rushed to the scene at the same time.”

Some questioned why so many emergency vehicles would respond to such a limited incident, asking whether ambulances are not normally dispatched through the centralized “120” emergency command system. The unusual scene quickly ignited a storm of commentary online. In the comment sections, some mainland netizens mocked the situation, writing: “Are they here to kidnap someone or to save someone?” and “Too many wolves, not enough meat!”

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Suspicious behavior

Others expressed unease rather than sarcasm: “If you can still run after being hit, run fast!” one user wrote. Another joked: “Is it panda blood? Why so many vehicles providing tracking service!” Several comments reflected deeper public anxiety: “It’s terrifying — what if it turns into brain death?” and “Seeing these vehicles makes my heart race.”

One user lamented a shift in public perception: “I used to feel moved when I saw an ambulance, thinking a life was being saved. Now it feels frightening. I don’t know whose child will suffer next.” Another wrote: “Seeing an ambulance now feels like there’s killing involved. I have a shadow over it.”

The Tangshan case is not the first traffic accident to spark controversy over ambulance response. On Jan. 22, a car crash on Weihe North Road in Zhengzhou, Henan Province reportedly drew two ambulances before police arrived. Some commenters reacted with disbelief: “What a coincidence — two ambulances right on time!”

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Others immediately connected it to darker suspicions, writing: “Organs are worth so much money… two vehicles arriving immediately must have been planned.”

Growing disappearances

In another case on Feb. 2 in Yantai, Shandong Province, a crash occurred around 7:30 a.m. Before traffic police reached the scene or responsibility was determined, an ambulance marked “Wendeng Orthopedic Hospital” allegedly arrived from another city and transported the injured person away.

One netizen sarcastically remarked that the trip from Wendeng to Yantai would take over an hour, adding: “This is clearly hunting — seeing human body parts on the ground and striking immediately!”

A recent surveillance clip from Wuhan also circulated online, showing a sedan hitting an electric bike rider just as an ambulance labeled “Wuhan Emergency Center” arrived. Some questioned: “Was this ambulance dispatched specifically for this crash?” Another commenter claimed: “Human organs have become industrialized… forming a one-stop service chain.”

Claims of ‘fake’ ambulances

Online rumors have intensified further with videos alleging that “unlicensed, sealed fake ambulances” are appearing more frequently in some Chinese cities. In one clip dated Jan. 23, the person filming says: “So many unlicensed vehicles are parked along the roadside, and they’re sealed shut.”

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Some users escalated the narrative dramatically, accusing such vehicles of being used for kidnapping. One comment alleged: “These fake ambulances are mainly used to abduct young people and children…”

A Chinese blogger recently claimed that traffickers have shifted targets from children to young adults aged 16 to 30, allegedly staging e-bike collisions to lure victims into ambulances. The blogger alleged: “The ambulance is their people… even the medical staff are disguised.”

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He further claimed that victims could be extorted, forced into telecom fraud, or subjected to blood testing for organ matching. These allegations remain unverified.

Organ donation statistics raise alarm

On the first day of 2026, China’s official organ donation management website published an article titled “A Warm Closing to 2025 — Setting Off Toward Love in 2026!” stating: “As of Dec. 31, 2025, the nation has recorded more than 7.3 million registered voluntary donors, more than 63,000 completed organ donation cases, and more than 197,000 organs donated, saving the lives of over 190,000 people.”

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An X user named “Prayer and preaching” argued that while authorities claim citizen donation is the only legal source, “the real organ sources are basically left unchecked.” The post further alleged that China’s transplant industry expanded rapidly after 2000, with Falun Gong practitioners first exposing claims of live organ harvesting in 2006.

Falun Gong, also known as Falun Dafa, is a meditation practice rooted in the principles of truthfulness, compassion, and forbearance. Despite being peaceful in nature, the CCP has launched a brutal campaign to eradicate the practice since 1999. Thousands have since perished at the hands of Chinese police, with many adherents today still undergoing routine monitoring, arbitrary travel bans, and arrests.

Wang Zhiyuan, head of the World Organization to Investigate the Persecution of Falun Gong, told Vision China in a recent interview: “When Falun Gong organs cannot satisfy them, they will inevitably extend their black hand to all of society.” He urged the public to remain vigilant and work together to stop what he called a crime against humanity.

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.