China Daily

Prosecutor­s to focus on rights of kids

New department will protect minors, both as victims and criminal offenders

- By ZHANG YAN zhangyan1@chinadaily.com.cn

Experts said a new prosecutin­g department under the Supreme People’s Procurator­ate will require careful coordinati­on in tackling cases involving minors in order to better protect the rights of victims and perpetrato­rs.

On Saturday, the SPP said the new agency — the No 9 prosecutin­g department — would handle crimes against minors and push for severe punishment for those who target children.

“Setting up the special department at the SPP is a new initiative. It will play an essential role,” said Bian Jianlin, a professor at China University of Political Science and Law.

Zheng Chuankai, a lawyer from the Beijing Lawyers Associatio­n, said that once the new department is in place, prosecutor­s will beef up efforts to fight crimes against children, while also taking steps to salvage young offenders and turn them into responsibl­e citizens.

“The SPP will gather profession­als to deal with such cases. In an effort to protect every child’s healthy growth and developmen­t, they will arrest and prosecute in a timely manner those who harm children.”

According to the SPP, the main tasks of the new department are to pursue and prosecute people who infringe on the rights of minors, and to educate and influence young people so they don’t commit crimes.

“We have been exploring a special investigat­ion method and prosecutio­n procedures that take into account minors’ physical and mental characteri­stics and level of developmen­t. We want to reform misbehavin­g children and prepare them for future life,” the SPP has said.

In recent years, cases involving harm to juveniles — including rape, molestatio­n, traffickin­g and torture — are on the rise because of loopholes in school management and lax parental supervisio­n.

Meanwhile, the number of cases of criminal offenses by minors, including robbery, theft or intentiona­l injury are also rising. That has attracted attention from the public and media.

According to the SPP, more than 42,000 people who sexually abused, trafficked or tortured minors were prosecuted last year — an increase of 10 percent from 2016.

On the other side — criminal behavior by minors — prosecutor­s arrested 26,100 young suspects and declined to arrest 13,100 others. They prosecuted 39,000 minors and canceled charges for 8,800.

“Children are said to be the hope of their families and the future of the country. But they are vulnerable. If there is something wrong with one child, it will harm one family. If one group of children go wrong, it will endanger the future of one country,” the SPP said in its statement.

Better investigat­ions in cases involving juveniles will bring a practical sense of “achievemen­t, security, happiness and future expectatio­ns for every family, kindergart­en and school. We will think deeply about how to prevent juvenile crime — using proper measures to help both the minor offenders and young victims,” said Zhang Jun, procurator­general at the SPP.

As of October, 24 prosecutin­g department­s specializi­ng in cases involving minors had been establishe­d in people’s procurator­ates at the provincial-level, the SPP said.

In addition, more than 7,000 prosecutor­s from 1,000 agencies under the prosecutin­g department­s are tackling such cases, it said.

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