This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It will not be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/6164408.stm
The article has changed 3 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 1 | Version 2 |
---|---|
China official admits to torture | China official admits to torture |
(about 2 hours later) | |
A senior Chinese official has made a rare admission about the extent of the use of torture in getting convictions in China's courts. | A senior Chinese official has made a rare admission about the extent of the use of torture in getting convictions in China's courts. |
Wang Zhenchuan, Deputy Procurator General, said at least 30 wrong verdicts were handed down each year because torture had been used. | Wang Zhenchuan, Deputy Procurator General, said at least 30 wrong verdicts were handed down each year because torture had been used. |
Mr Wang said the real number could be higher, according to state media. | Mr Wang said the real number could be higher, according to state media. |
Confidence in China's justice system has been seriously undermined by recent high-profile wrongful convictions. | Confidence in China's justice system has been seriously undermined by recent high-profile wrongful convictions. |
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. | 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. |
Mr Wang's unusually frank comments appeared to be part of a campaign to tackle problems in the judicial system, and shore up public trust. | Mr Wang's unusually frank comments appeared to be part of a campaign to tackle problems in the judicial system, and shore up public trust. |
He said suspects' rights needed to be protected by stopping the use of illegal interrogations involving the use of torture. | He said suspects' rights needed to be protected by stopping the use of illegal interrogations involving the use of torture. |
He said illegal interrogation existed to "some extent" in local judicial practice. | He said illegal interrogation existed to "some extent" in local judicial practice. |
"Nearly every wrongful verdict in recent years is involved in illegal interrogation," he said, according to the official Xinhua news agency. | "Nearly every wrongful verdict in recent years is involved in illegal interrogation," he said, according to the official Xinhua news agency. |
Change of tack | Change of tack |
China outlawed torture in 1996, but a UN special envoy on torture, Manfred Nowak, said last year it remained widespread. | China outlawed torture in 1996, but a UN special envoy on torture, Manfred Nowak, said last year it remained widespread. |
Mr Nowak, who spent two weeks in the country, said torture methods included electric shock batons, cigarette burns, and submersion in pits of water or sewage. | |
China rarely admits publicly to weaknesses in its judicial system. | China rarely admits publicly to weaknesses in its judicial system. |
But correspondents say the recent high-profile mistakes appear to have prompted a change of thinking. | But correspondents say the recent high-profile mistakes appear to have prompted a change of thinking. |
In January, Mr Wang said China was to begin recording police interviews in workplace-related crimes to stop confessions being extracted through torture. | In January, Mr Wang said China was to begin recording police interviews in workplace-related crimes to stop confessions being extracted through torture. |
And last month, China's parliament approved a law allowing only the country's top court to approve death sentences - a move designed to stop serious abuses in lower level courts. | And last month, China's parliament approved a law allowing only the country's top court to approve death sentences - a move designed to stop serious abuses in lower level courts. |