China put 2,400 people to death last year, a US-based human rights group
said yesterday, shedding rare light on a statistic Beijing considers a state
secret.
The figure was a fall of 20 per cent from 2012, the Dui Hua Foundation
said, and a fraction of the 12,000 in 2002.
China is so
reticent on the issue that it has done nothing to publicise the long-term
decline in its use of the death penalty. But it still executes more people than
every other country put together, human rights groups say.
The total for the rest of
the world combined was 778 people in 2013, according to campaign group Amnesty
International's annual report earlier this year. It did not give an estimate
for Chinese executions.
Dui Hua said it obtained its
figures from "a judicial official with access to the number of executions
carried out each year".
But the annual declines were
"likely to be offset" this year, it said, due to factors including
the "strike hard" campaign in the violence-wracked region of Xinjiang
.
Hundreds of people have been
convicted of terrorist offences in the area, and last week a court condemned 12 to death in connection with a July attack.
"China currently
executes more people every year than the rest of the world combined, but it has
executed far fewer people since the power of final review of death sentences
was returned to the [Supreme People's Court] in 2007," Dui Hua said.
The top court examined all
death sentences issued in the country, and sent back 39 per cent of those it
reviewed last year to lower courts for more evidence, Dui Hua said, citing the Southern
Weekly newspaper.
The legal system is tightly
controlled by the ruling Communist Party and courts have a virtual 100 per cent
conviction rate in criminal cases.
The use of force to extract
confessions remains widespread in the country, leading to a number of miscarriages
of justice.
The authorities have
occasionally exonerated wrongfully executed convicts after others came forward
to confess, or because the supposed murder victim was later found alive.
In one landmark case in
June, the Supreme People's Court overturned the death sentence on Li Yan, a
woman who killed her abusive husband.
Earlier this year the
director of Amnesty International Hong Kong, Mabel Au Mei-po, said that in 2011
Beijing took 13 offences off a list of 68 crimes punishable by death, including
financial crimes.
This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as
Executions down but China 'still leads the world'
No comments:
Post a Comment