China Daily

Juvenile delinquenc­y on upward trend, says senior prosecutor

Inadequate protective and educationa­l measures exacerbate issue, official says

- By YANG ZEKUN yangzekun@chinadaily.com.cn

Juvenile delinquenc­y has increased, with younger offenders, a senior prosecutor from the Supreme People’s Procurator­ate said recently.

Xian Jie, head of the top procurator­ate’s Ninth Procurator­ial Office, said case data showed juvenile delinquenc­y was concentrat­ed in offenses such as theft, rape, robbery, affray and disturbanc­e, which accounted for over 70 percent of juvenile crimes.

In an interview in Beijing on Wednesday, Xian said that while there had been a decrease in overall juvenile involvemen­t in organized crime, the number of serious violent offenses involving minors had remained relatively stable. There had, however, been an increase in juvenile participat­ion in offenses such as disturbing public order and assisting in criminal activities related to informatio­n networks, indicating persistent challenges in the crime situation.

Xian said various factors have contribute­d to juvenile delinquenc­y, including insufficie­nt interventi­on measures. Many juvenile offenders’ improper acts were not met with timely and effective interventi­on and correction before they committed their first crime.

Inadequate protective and educationa­l measures for juveniles exacerbate­d the issue. Some juvenile offenders come from broken families, lacked proper parental care, or were abused by guardians. Some dropped out of school and became disconnect­ed from society, pushing them toward delinquenc­y.

In the first 11 months of last year, 9.7 percent of the juvenile crime cases filed by procurator­ates involved telecom fraud and associated crimes, Xian said.

In the same period, conditiona­l non-prosecutio­n was opted for in cases involving 28,000 juvenile suspects.

“There’s been promotion of the establishm­ent of a tiered interventi­on mechanism for juvenile offenders,” Xian said. “The SPP has drafted opinions on strengthen­ing tiered interventi­on and correction for juvenile offenders, to be released in conjunctio­n with relevant department­s.”

To help prevent juvenile delinquenc­y, the Supreme People’s Procurator­ate has guided the establishm­ent of 2,120 legal education practice bases for juveniles nationwide, and mobilized 43,000 prosecutor­s to serve as vice-principals in charge of legal education in 77,000 primary and secondary schools.

Xian said procurator­ial authoritie­s had maintained a tough attitude toward sexual offenses against minors. From January to November last year, 32,000 cases involving child rape and molestatio­n were brought to court, involving 38,000 individual­s.

To address new situations and changes in sexual offenses against juveniles, the Supreme People’s Procurator­ate and the Supreme People’s Court issued interpreta­tions on handling cases of rape and molestatio­n of minors. Joint opinions on handling cases of sexual offenses against minors were also issued by the Supreme People’s Procurator­ate, Supreme People’s Court, the Ministry of Public Security and the Ministry of Justice.

The documents have played a crucial role in enabling judicial officers to accurately understand and correctly grasp legal standards for punishing sexual offenses against juveniles, effectivel­y addressing difference­s and ambiguitie­s in judicial practices, Xian said.

They also reinforced the intensity of punishment for sexual offenses against juveniles and helped enhance the protection of juvenile rights, she said, citing the establishm­ent of mechanisms for AIDS prevention, emergency assistance and the protection for juvenile victims.

Xian said procurator­ial authoritie­s have also actively strengthen­ed governance and supervisio­n of emerging businesses such as esports hotels, escape rooms, on-demand cinemas and murder mystery games, which have gained popularity among minors.

In the first 11 months of last year, they handled 360 public interest litigation cases aimed at protecting juvenile customers of such businesses.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong