|
|
Criminals are often led around in chains in front of huge crowds |
|
CHINA OVERTURNS 15 PERCENT OF DEATH SENTENCES
June 27, 2008: China's highest court overturned 15 percent
of all death sentences reviewed in the first half of this year, an official
newspaper said, although the total number of executions carried out remains a
state secret. The China Daily touted the rejection rate as a sign of the high
degree of scrutiny exercised by the court since it took back the right of final
review from lower courts last year. Most death sentences were overturned for lack of evidence or
because they were 'inappropriate,' the paper quoted Judge Gao Jinghong, of the
Supreme People's Court's Third Criminal Law Court, as saying.China is following international trends in reducing numbers
of executions and could eliminate the death penalty altogether 'when social
conditions demand so,' the paper said. 'But for now it has to stay.' In a speech to the national legislature this spring, the
head of the Supreme People's Court said only "extremely vile
criminals" were executed in China last year, claiming reform efforts had
been an untrammeled success.Prospects for further change are uncertain. Zhou Yongkang,
who handles law and order issues on the Communist Party's supreme nine-member
Politburo Standing Committee, told judges and prosecutors earlier this month
that China's unique political, cultural and economic orientation ruled out the
adoption of Western legal standards. (Sources: Associated Press, 27/06/2008)
|