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Martino
10-31-2006, 06:14 AM
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/6101380.stm

China has approved a law allowing only the country's top court to approve death sentences, state media reports.

The move follows a series of miscarriages of justice since lower courts were given the right to approve the death sentence in the 1980s.

China's official state news agency, Xinhua, said it was believed to be the most important reform of capital punishment in more than two decades.

China is accused of carrying out more executions than any other country.

In 2005, it carried out an estimated 1,770 executions and sentenced nearly 4,000 people to death, human rights group Amnesty International says.

Small step

The change in the law, approved by the country's top legislature, is due to come into effect on 1 January 2007, Xinhua reported.

It means that all death penalty sentences given by lower courts must be reviewed and ratified by the Supreme Court.

But it is unclear whether this will involve a full appeal hearing or, as it is at present in lower courts, simply a review of the paperwork from the initial trial.

Jerome Cohen, a US expert on the Chinese legal system, called the move a "step in the right direction", which shows the country's top judiciary is increasingly concerned by the death penalty system.

But he said more fundamental reform of the death penalty legislation is needed to change the way such cases are tried and appealed.

China's chief justice Xiao Yang called it "an important procedural step in preventing wrongful convictions".

"It will also give the defendants in death sentence cases one more chance to have their opinions heard," Mr Xiao said in comments carried by state media.

Miscarriages of justice

The Supreme Court had responsibility for reviewing all death penalty cases until the early 1980s when provincial courts were given the authority to issue the death sentence.

Early this year, death penalty cases began to be heard in public as China came under pressure at home and abroad over the rising number of miscarriages of justice.

Two cases of wrongful convictions got widespread coverage in the Chinese media last year.

A butcher executed for murder in 1989 was proved innocent when his alleged victim was found alive; while a man was freed after 11 years in jail when his wife, whom he was accused of killing, was also found alive.

The authorities are hoping the decision will tighten up the current process, but it remains to be seen whether it has any impact on the number of people being executed in China, the BBC's Dan Griffiths in Beijing says.

SunWuKong
10-31-2006, 08:41 AM
i am against the death sentence, but what that report and a lot of other reports do not mention is that China also has one of the lowest crime rates in the world - however, admittedly corruption probably plays a large part in that, meaning a lot of crimes may simply be going unpunished.

Martino
10-31-2006, 10:01 AM
i am against the death sentence, but what that report and a lot of other reports do not mention is that China also has one of the lowest crime rates in the world - however, admittedly corruption probably plays a large part in that, meaning a lot of crimes may simply be going unpunished.


Or unreported?

It wasn't so long ago that organised crime was supposedly running rampant in China, hand in hand with the capitalist boom.

SunWuKong
10-31-2006, 11:27 AM
Or unreported?

It wasn't so long ago that organised crime was supposedly running rampant in China, hand in hand with the capitalist boom.

supposedly, organised crime is less rampant in mainland China than it is in HK and Taiwan, because of the severity of punishment in China and the tight control the central government has.

but not that i'm an expert on the subject or anything, so i could be wrong.

haplesshobo
11-01-2006, 11:26 AM
In 2005, it carried out an estimated 1,770 executions and sentenced nearly 4,000 people to death, human rights group Amnesty International says.


The number of people executed in China is a state secret; Amnesty's numbers are just a guess based on Chinese media reports. Its probably a lot more than that. Some experts put the number closer to 10,000. In comparison, there were 60 people executed last year in the united states.

And, this article stops short of confronting the real issues and problems. It focuses on death penalty cases in China and how this will be a small step towards stopping these egregious cases of capital punishment, but the real problem is the lack of the rule of law and that affects everything, leading to these abuses where innocent people are getting executed. Without a strong rule of law, political pressure decides legal decisions and lawyers have gotten disbarred for defending their clients. The police are often undertrained and often don't have resources like forensics so they often torture and beat suspects into confession. Take care of those problems, and you'll see less cases of people getting executed for something they didn't do.