The Chinese government continues to illegally harvest organs from millions of its innocent prisoners despite saying it had ended the practice two years ago, a decade-long study has alleged.
Experts estimate between 60,000 and 100,000 prisoners of conscience are executed annually and have their hearts, livers and other organs removed to use for transplants.
In all, approximately 1.5 million have had their organs removed at 712 liver and kidney transplant centres across China since 2000, with over 300,000 of those taking place at unregulated centres.
The report also found many surgeons had simply "lost count" of the quantity of transplants they had been asked to perform on a daily basis, with some having undertaken as many as six liver removals in one day.
The findings were published in an updated version of the 2007 study 'Bloody Harvest: Revised Report into Allegations of Organ Harvesting of Falun Gong Practitioners in China'.
Falun Gong is a unique form of meditative practice established in 1992 and the Chinese government has fought to eradicate it for decades.
It has long been believed Falun Gong practitioners are being executed 'on demand' by the Chinese government, to compensate for the country's shortage of organ donors.
The report was researched and authored by former Canadian secretary of state David Kilgour, human rights lawyer David Matas and journalist Ethan Gutmann to expose widespread medical wrong-doing in the Asian country.
The Chinese government officially state that 10,000 organ transplants take place in the country each year, but the trio believe this figure is far lower than the real quantity.
In a statement, Matas said: "We can easily surpass the official Chinese figure just by looking at the two or three biggest hospitals.
"That increased discrepancy leads us to conclude that there has been a far larger slaughter of practitioners of Falun Gong for their organs than we had originally estimated.
"The ultimate conclusion is that the Chinese Communist Party has engaged the state in the mass killings of innocents."
Falun Gong practitioners were forced to undergo medical tests before their results were put on a database of living organ sources so quick organ matches could be made, the authors claim.
In response to the report, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying told a press conference: "I want to say that such stories about forced organ harvesting in China are imaginary and baseless - they don't have any factual foundation."
In 2014, China announced that it would end the harvesting of organs from executed prisoners and move to a voluntary donation-based system.
Last year Amnesty International confirmed China remains the world's largest executioner of prisoners in the charity's annual report.