[Main Text] Grandpa of Yiyi: She couldn't eat or drink water, and was beaten to that extent. Unexpectedly, at 4 a.m. on December 9th, the on-duty aunt at Children's Hope Home found Yiyi's hands and feet were already ice cold. The sudden passing of Yiyi left everyone puzzled about the cause of death, prompting Children's Hope Home to request an autopsy for Yiyi. Hu Zhiqiang: This pneumonia manifests as chronic symptoms but is relatively secretive; once triggered by some factor, it can rapidly develop and quickly lead to respiratory failure. [Simultaneous] Hu Zhiqiang: We cannot draw such a conclusion. On the contrary, we believe there was no abuse, or any external injuries found on the body surface. There were no fractures or dislocations in the limbs, which we could exclude through our examination. Eight days after Yiyi's death, under the full supervision of Jifeng and Yiyi's father and grandfather, the forensic doctor conducted an autopsy on Yiyi. At the time, volunteer Jifeng specially took photos of the autopsy, hoping to keep a memento for himself. Additionally, at that point in the volunteer group of Children's Hope Home, the doubts about the unclear cause of Yiyi's death had become overwhelming. Out of necessity, Jifeng posted Yiyi's photos in the QQ group. [Simultaneous] From the entire autopsy process, can you exclude the possibility that Yiyi died due to improper care? [Main Text] After treatment, Yiyi was unable to fully recover. She lived at Children's Hope Home for a year until December 6th last year when she suddenly began vomiting uncontrollably and was immediately sent to the hospital. Volunteer Jifeng: The purpose of releasing these photos was to convey a message that Children's Hope Home had already conducted an autopsy on Yiyi. You can see, the person lying in bed being dissected is Yiyi, and indeed an autopsy was performed. The report has not yet come out, and we need to wait. [Simultaneous] Recently, a photo of a three-year-old girl's chest being opened during an autopsy has caused a huge uproar online. Some people suspect that it involves organ trafficking, so what is the truth? Please watch the reporter's investigation. [Main Text] Our country currently does not have a very modernized forensic examination and autopsy facility as imagined by the general public. In most cases, we are on-site. Yiyi's body was autopsied in the hospital morgue, thus the conditions were extremely rudimentary. On February 16, 2012, CCTV's "Truth Investigation" aired "The Truth Behind the Rumors of Child Organ Trafficking," below is the program transcript. [Main Text] Wang Yue believed that Yiyi's death was the result of multiple causes and could not be attributed to a single reason according to common sense. In response to this, some netizens questioned why diffuse pan-bronchiolitis, being a chronic disease, led to Yiyi's sudden death. [Main Text] Currently, Children's Hope Home has reported to the Beijing Public Security Bureau, demanding an investigation into Wu Xuxin's behavior for infringing on their reputation rights. The Beijing police have filed a case, and the matter is under investigation. [Main Text] According to routine, autopsy reports are generally issued within 15 to 30 working days. After seeing the detailed autopsy photos published by Jifeng, the initial inquiries from volunteers turned into waiting. By the 51st day after Yiyi's death, the autopsy report had still not been released. Volunteer Wu Xuxin then published the unexplained autopsy photos of Yiyi online and hoped for the prompt disclosure of Yiyi's autopsy results. Subsequently, various speculations online pointed towards Children's Hope Home, with some even suggesting that they might have been involved in selling Yiyi's organs. This incident occurred when she was beaten into a coma by her own mother, resulting in severe hydrocephalus, as well as optic nerve atrophy and left brain atrophy. After the neighbors reported the case, Yiyi's mother was sentenced for child abuse. With the help of over 20 volunteers, including Jifeng, for more than five months, Yiyi survived but became blind and suffered from various diseases, urgently needing professional rehabilitation treatment. Thus, Yiyi was sent to the Beijing Children's Hope Home. Children's Hope Home is a civilian non-profit organization dedicated to providing post-surgical recovery foster care for orphans from welfare institutions across the country. Volunteer Jifeng, whose online name is "Fighter Jet," is the photographer of this photo. It was he who brought Yiyi back from the brink of death. Yiyi was born in Hangzhou in 2008, the second of three daughters born to unmarried parents. However, her life before the age of two was a nightmare. Her mother frequently beat and verbally abused all three children, and her father lost his ability to work due to alcoholism. Her grandparents made a living by cleaning trash daily. When Yiyi was two years old, she witnessed her mother beating her older sister until she bled profusely and could not escape her mother's brutal punishment herself. Zhang Wen, the executive director of Children's Hope Home, stated that this was just a normal autopsy photo taken after the child's death, and there was absolutely no talk of selling children's organs. Although Zhang Wen promptly responded online to the incident, it did not quell the doubts but rather intensified them. Fu Zheng: When she was taken to the morgue, her blanket and mattress went into the freezer with her. [Simultaneous] Why were the autopsy conditions so rudimentary? We found Hu Zhiqiang, the director of the Beijing Huaxia Forensic Appraisal Center, who conducted Yiyi's autopsy. On January 29th this year, at 3:42 PM, a completely uncensored photo of a child's corpse with the chest opened was published online. Due to its graphic nature, the photo immediately caught the public's attention. Although most internet users believed that such a bloody photo should not be widely spread on public networks, the question raised by the poster, Wu Xuxin, regarding the cause of the child's death escalated the event continuously. Hu Zhiqiang: Yiyi passed away on December 9th, and we conducted the autopsy on December 17th, eight days later. At that time, the body had already started to decompose lightly. To say that it was related to organ trafficking is absurd nonsense, impossible. Share to: Welcome to comment, I want to comment Wang Yue, Director of the Health Law Research Office at Peking University Medical Department: If a child has already died, not to mention eight days, even a few hours after death, his organs would have no clinical use. Zhang Wen: I can see behind the voices of doubt, one heart filled with love after another. I think in such circumstances, we must remain grounded, and also accept everyone's opinions, be open and transparent, and open the door wide. Fu Zheng: Because on the first day of seeing the doctor, her diagnosis was gastroenteritis, so we reported it as gastroenteritis. [Simultaneous] [Main Text] We contacted Wu Xuxin, attempting to interview her, but she declined our interview request. The basis for this suspicion is the small floral quilt shown under Yiyi's body in the photo, which clearly came from Children's Hope Home, making the unprofessional autopsy scene hard to believe. Hu Zhiqiang: Based on the current autopsy situation, her final cause of death should be widespread pan-bronchiolitis pneumonia leading to death. Through the investigation, it was found that the claim about Yiyi being involved in organ trafficking was unfounded. On December 31st last year, Children's Hope Home publicly disclosed Yiyi's death certificate and autopsy report. This should have cleared up the controversy, but unexpectedly, a new round of doubts resurfaced. [Simultaneous] Through the investigation, the journalist discovered that there was no evidence supporting the claim that Yiyi's organs were sold. However, the doubts from the internet did not end. Wu Xuxin, who previously released the autopsy photos, again posted information online stating that she had personally witnessed Yiyi being tied up at Children's Hope Home, causing her arm to dislocate, which sparked further suspicions among netizens, believing that Yiyi fell ill due to abuse by the staff at Children's Hope Home. [Main Text] Shortly after the release of the photos, someone claimed that Children's Hope Home was selling children's organs under the guise of charity, akin to a bombshell, turning doubts directly into insults and defamation, triggering a wave of questioning against charitable organizations. Is the actual situation really like this? Are there transactions involving the sale of children's organs behind the photos? Netizens pointed out that the cause of death written on Yiyi's death certificate was gastroenteritis, which did not match the cause of death stated in the autopsy report. [Simultaneous] Zhang Wen, Executive Director of Children's Hope Home: When the autopsy photos were released in the QQ group, it was very clear that they were autopsy photos. Without knowing the child's condition or the cause of death, it is easy to misunderstand. Wang Yue: Her vomiting may have more to do with the nervous system because this child had severe hydrocephalus. [Abstract] Zhang Wen: After the experts at Tiantan Hospital examined her, they said it was a miracle that the child survived, because if it were an adult, they wouldn't have made it. Her right brain was completely atrophied, so there was nothing that could be cured. For the online doubts about Children's Hope Home selling children's organs, Hu Zhiqiang believes it goes against medical common sense. Yiyi's uncle: Seeing so much blood flow down at once, she got scared and started avoiding her mom. I saw her being kicked out of the room by her mom and sitting by the sewer outside the door. [Simultaneous] [Main Text] [Main Text] Fu Zheng, Staff Member of Children's Hope Home: It was diagnosed as gastroenteritis, and some anti-inflammatory drugs were prescribed, both Chinese and Western medicine. Then intravenous fluids were administered at the hospital. [Main Text] Hu Zhiqiang, Director of Beijing Huaxia Forensic Appraisal Center: [Simultaneous] [Simultaneous] Weibo Recommendation | Today's Weibo Hot Topics (Editor: SN017) [Main Text] According to Wu Xuxin's online statements, this three-year-old girl named Yiyi, suffering from serious illness, was fostered at Beijing Children's Hope Home for rehabilitation treatment. As a volunteer, Wu Xuxin had cared for her multiple times. Since December 9th, 2011, after learning about Yiyi's sudden death at Children's Hope Home, she repeatedly inquired about the cause of death but never received answers, forcing her to choose this method to seek the truth about Yiyi's death. [Simultaneous] Volunteer Jifeng: Taking the photos was to prepare for future questions, because I have taken care of Yiyi for so long, and I consider Yiyi as my own daughter.