China Daily

Office to focus on juvenile case hearings

- By CAO YIN caoyin@chinadaily.com.cn

An office that will promote the work of juvenile courts was set up at China’s top court on Tuesday to strengthen the protection of minors and better solve problems involving children.

The office, with fixed staff members, will help juvenile tribunals across the country enhance management and improve their profession­alism in handling cases, Yang Wanming, vice-president of the Supreme People’s Court, said at a news conference on Tuesday.

He said the establishm­ent of the office is a key move in meeting the central leadership’s rule of law requiremen­ts and also a response to public concerns about children’s developmen­t in recent years.

Statistics from the top court show that from 2016 to last year, Chinese courts punished 24,386 people who harmed juveniles, including those who abducted or molested children, or organized child begging gangs, and solved more than 1.2 million civil cases regarding child raising, custody and visitation.

Meanwhile, violent crimes committed by youngsters, including intentiona­l killing, injuries and rapes, frequently hit headlines and shocked the nation, causing heated public discussion­s about the need to strengthen the rehabilita­tion of young offenders.

To solve the problems, last year the country’s top legislatur­e revised the Criminal Law and two other laws on protecting minors and preventing juvenile delinquenc­y.

“While helping juvenile courts apply the amended laws accurately in case handling, the office will conduct more research on new and hot issues about children, such as school bullying, child molestatio­n, guardiansh­ip of left-behind children and children’s informatio­n safety,” Yang, who heads the office, said.

He said it plans to unify the standards of case hearings involving children nationwide by revising or drafting judicial interpreta­tions and publishing details of influentia­l cases.

On Tuesday, the top court also establishe­d six work stations for dealing with juvenile affairs in its circuit courts in Shenzhen, Shenyang, Nanjing, Zhengzhou, Chongqing and Xi’an in a bid to give stronger support to the protection of children and their developmen­t.

To remove confusions in legal practice and help the public better understand the laws, the top court issued the details of seven benchmark criminal cases at the news conference.

In one, a man surnamed Zou was recently sentenced to 10 years in prison for molesting two boys under the age of 10 over a long time.

“The convict’s actions seriously harmed the children, causing them psychologi­cal trauma, so he should be harshly punished,” said He Li, chief judge of the top court’s No 1 Criminal Division.

“The case also told us that preventing boys from being molested is as important as it is for girls,” she said, calling for society to pay more attention to boys’ protection.

In January, a guideline issued by the top court ordered courts nationwide to offer urgent and necessary psychologi­cal, economic and educationa­l support to children when hearing cases involving violence and sexual assault.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong