China Daily (Hong Kong)

Courts act to improve protection of rights

- By CAO YIN caoyin@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s judicial authoritie­s will continue efforts to correct wrongful verdicts this year and take comprehens­ive measures to protect citizens’ personal and property rights, two senior judicial officials said on Sunday.

Last year, 1,076 criminal defendants were declared innocent, 37 more than in 2015, and 1,376 wrongful verdicts or sentences were changed on appeal, the Supreme People’s Court President Zhou Qiang said during a work report to about 3,000 national legislator­s.

He mentioned a case on Dec 2 in which the top court posthumous­ly pardoned Nie Shubin, a native of Hebei province executed in 1995. Nie was found to have been wrongly convicted of rape and murder on the basis of unclear and insufficie­nt evidence.

“Such wrongful conviction­s humiliate justice,” Zhou said, adding that courts at all levels must learn a lesson from such cases.

Cao Jianming, procurator­general of the Supreme People’s Procurator­ate, asked procurator­s on Sunday to find, report and correct possible wrongful cases, as well as to compensate victims and hold liable those involved in judicial miscarriag­es.

The top court and procurator­ate also pledged to help maintain social stability and boost economic growth, ahead of a key Communist Party of China congress to be convened in the second half of this year.

The chief justice and procurator-general noted that judicial organs will also target cases related to poverty alleviatio­n, a fundamenta­l task in building a moderately prosperous society by 2020 as set by the Chinese government.

Since the 18th National Congress of the Communist Party of China in late 2012, courts nationwide have rectified a number of mistaken conviction­s in serious cases, which “finally let justice prevail” and “reflects the achievemen­ts of the rule of law”, he said.

Zhou Guangquan, an NPC deputy and a criminal law professor at Tsinghua University, said the authoritie­s’ strong determinat­ion to act in wrongful cases impressed him.

“I’m glad to see the correction of some wrongful cases, but what I find more gratifying is the improvemen­t in rules and regulation­s to prevent such miscarriag­es,” he said.

Zhao Wanping, a national legislator from Anhui province, suggested that judicial authoritie­s take more initiative in preventing and finding improper verdicts.

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