The Borneo Post

China drops charges against five police over a death in custody

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SHANGHAI: Chinese prosecutor­s have dropped charges against five police following the death of an environmen­talist in custody in May, the official China Daily said yesterday, a case that sparked public disquiet about China’s law enforcemen­t methods.

Lei Yang, 29, was arrested in a massage parlour as part of a police operation against prostituti­on and died hours later after choking on his own vomit.

While no charges will be pressed against the police officers, the Beijing People’s Procurator­ate accepted they used excessive force to arrest Lei, and ruled that their misconduct had a “direct causal relationsh­ip” with his death, the China Daily said.

The officers also failed to perform emergency lifesaving procedures or take Lei to hospital and obstructed an enquiry by falsifying evidence, but prosecutor­s ruled that their misdemeano­urs were ‘minor’. Four of the suspects had been released on bail, while a fifth remained in custody, the newspaper said. It cited Beijing police as saying that the five officers would be punished in accordance with regulation­s.

The case sparked a public outcry earlier this year when Lei’s wife cast doubt on the results of a police investigat­ion into her husband’s death, with hundreds of comments on social media.

The UN Committee Against Torture last December expressed its concerns about the mistreatme­nt of detainees in China’s police stations and prisons. — Reuters

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