It
had been a quiet two years in the news concerning capital punishment in China
but the political agenda of recent announcements of executions is a cause for
concern.
China
remains by far the world's centre of state executions, but the number of
executions has dropped dramatically in the past decade, from 10,000 to 15,000 a
year around 2000, to 2,000 or so last year. Precise numbers are impossible to
obtain, but some of the motives for Beijing's attempt to reduce execution
totals can be discerned.
China is
sensitive to the objections that come from the massive scale of its executions
and from publicity about miscarriages of justice. Beijing also wanted to
reassert its authority over local governments that had been executing without
supervision under the "strike hard" policies that started in the
early 1980s.
The reforms China adopted in
2007 had some effect on the rate of executions, through the issuance of
guidelines and the restoration of national judicial review, but much of the 80
per cent or more decline in executions came as local governments responded to
Beijing's message of restraint.
If this is the good news
about capital punishment in China, the bad news concerns the willingness of the
regime to carry out executions as a policy to punish political dissent and
challenges to national authority.
In June, there was a widely
publicised execution of 13 Uygurs for what Chinese authorities characterised as
"terrorist attacks". The publicity was no accident in a nation where
the vast majority of trials and executions take place under the radar of media
coverage.
The government wanted to
send a message of disapproval not only to separatist partisans in Xinjiang but
also to ethnic minorities in Tibet and Mongolia, where similar tensions exist
between the centre and periphery. The party-state is much less concerned with
current levels of crime and drug abuse within its borders than it is with
threats of political autonomy.
The official reply to
questions about the political dimensions of executions in Xinjiang is to draw a
distinction between violent crimes and politics. In this view, the 13 people
were executed for terrorist acts rather than political action, which suggests
that violence in pursuit of political objectives should not be considered
political conduct.
But, of course, the pages of
world history are filled with events that were both violent crimes and
political action simultaneously. Are not the separatists in Ukraine political
when they are violent? What about the conduct of Nelson Mandela and the African
National Congress in apartheid South Africa? And if the 13 people who were
executed in Xinjiang were not engaged in a common political venture, why were
they executed together and with uncharacteristic publicity?
The mixture of violence and
political objectives is particularly troubling to the human rights community
because governments that oppose separatists are frequently willing to assume
that all who share the political objectives of separatists are also responsible
for the violent acts that have been committed by some of their members.
When political conflict and
crime control are mixed, the political context of capital punishment generates
suspicion about a government's motives and the justice of its procedures. This
is why people concerned about human rights get nervous about China, even if
2,000 executions a year are a sharp drop from 15,000. The political use of
execution threats casts a deep and discouraging shadow over civic life in
China.
Franklin E. Zimring is William G. Simon Professor
of Law at the University of California at Berkeley's Boalt Hall School of Law.
David T. Johnson is professor of sociology at the University of Hawaii at
Manoa. They are co-authors of The Next Frontier: National Development,
Political Change, and the Death Penalty in Asia
No comments:
Post a Comment