Bangkok Post

Beijing praises courts for punishing crimes

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BEIJING: The conviction­s of a prominent defence attorney and his associates were among the country’s top legal achievemen­ts last year, China’s chief justice said yesterday, highlighti­ng a case that has been criticised by Western government­s and rights groups.

In a report to the national legislatur­e, Zhou Qiang also said that China, which is believed to execute more people than the rest of the world combined, gave the death penalty “to an extremely small number of criminals for extremely serious offences” in the past 10 years.

The actual number of executions in China is a state secret. A 2007 decision that all death sentences must be reviewed by the Supreme People’s Court is believed to have reduced the number of executions dramatical­ly.

Mr Zhou praised courts for severely punishing crimes against state security and violent terrorism, and said the trend will continue in order “to resolutely safeguard the country’s political security”.

The only case of subverting state power he highlighte­d was that of Zhou Shifeng, director of a law firm that used to be one of the country’s best-known advocates for human rights. He was sentenced to seven years of imprisonme­nt in August for attempting to manipulate public opinion and harm national security.

Rights groups and Western government­s including the US had urged China to release Zhou and other activists and lawyers detained in a sweeping crackdown that began in 2015. Critics say it’s about the ruling Communist Party silencing opponents. The chief justice’s report didn’t say how many people were prosecuted or convicted of such offences, or how many cases were handled. Hundreds of people have been killed in recent years in attacks in the northweste­rn Xinjiang region, which Beijing blames on Islamic militants and separatist­s from the Uighur minority. Activists say repressive government policies have exacerbate­d tensions and radicalise­d local youth.

For the past four years, China has also carried out a crackdown on corruption intended to net officials at all levels. Chief Justice Zhou said that Chinese courts dealt with 45,000 cases of graft involving 63,000 people last year, an increase from 2015. A total of 35 were at or above ministeria­l or provincial level, he said.

In a separate report to the assembly, China’s top prosecutor, Cao Jianming, said the government last year initiated investigat­ions against 47,650 people for taking advantage of their official posts. He said 48 officials above the rank of minister were prosecuted, including Ling Jihua, a former chief of staff to ex-President Hu Jintao who was sentenced to life in prison in July for taking bribes, illegally obtaining state secrets and abusing power.

 ?? EPA ?? A Chinese ethnic minority delegate from Guangxi attends the third plenary session of the fifth Session of the 12th National People’s Congress at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China, yesterday. Speaking out
EPA A Chinese ethnic minority delegate from Guangxi attends the third plenary session of the fifth Session of the 12th National People’s Congress at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China, yesterday. Speaking out

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