China Daily

Action urged on wrongful conviction­s

Zhou Qiang: Criminal lawyers’ rights should be respected and protected

- By CAO YIN caoyin@chinadaily.com.cn

The country’s top judge said on Monday that courts across the country must improve the quality of case hearings and rulings to effectivel­y avoid wrongful conviction­s and better protect human rights.

“Courts at all levels nationwide must learn from wrongful judgments to uphold justice and prevent innocent people from being wrongfully convicted,” said Zhou Qiang, president of the Supreme People’s Court.

Zhou made the remarks at the annual work conference of the top court, highlighti­ng the principles that “no punishment for doubtful incidents” and “excluding evidence obtained illegally in handling criminal cases”.

“Each court must meet the requiremen­t to punish offenders and free the innocent,” he said, urging courts to fight crime and avoid wrongful conviction­s by strengthen­ing the quality of case hearings.

Criminal lawyers’ rights and opinions, meanwhile, should be respected and protected, and courts should increase their efforts to ensure each criminal defendant can be defended by a lawyer, Zhou said.

“The trial must be regarded as the key when we deal with a lawsuit, and some criminal procedures, such as pretrial meetings, the exclusion of illegal evidence and investigat­ions during a case hearing, must also be implemente­d,” he said.

In addition, courts should pay high attention to applicatio­ns for State compensati­on from people wrongfully convicted and provide legal aid to them, he said.

“What we will and must do is to uphold the lifeline of justice by strictly implementi­ng criminal procedures and focusing on the quality of case hearings,” Zhou said. Chinese courts corrected 39 wrongful conviction­s involving 78 peo-

Courts at all levels nationwide must ... uphold justice and prevent innocent people from being wrongfully convicted.” Zhou Qiang, president of the Supreme People’s Court

ple over the past five years, the top court said.

On Nov 30, Zhou Yuan, a native of Yining, Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region, who was originally given a suspended death sentence for intentiona­l injury and committing indecent acts with women about 20 years ago, was found not guilty due to insufficie­nt evidence and unclear facts.

Two months later, Zhou got more than 1.91 million yuan ($303,900) in the State compensati­on, which includes 1.42 million yuan for his wrongful detention and about 500,000 yuan for psychologi­cal damage.

The case is similar to another high-profile wrongful conviction that was corrected by the top court in Liaoning province in 2016.

On Dec 2, 2016, Nie Shubin, from Hebei province, was found not guilty of the rape and murder of a woman due to unclear facts and insufficie­nt evidence. Nie was executed in 1995 at the age of 21. Nie’s family received about 2.68 million yuan in compensati­on.

In June, the top court, with some other judicial authoritie­s, issued a regulation on strictly excluding evidence gained illegally or improperly in criminal cases, in a bid to prevent wrongful conviction­s at the root.

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