China Daily

Recordings by law enforcemen­t will be expanded nationwide

- By ZHANG YANGFEI zhangyangf­ei@chinadaily.com.cn

China is expanding a pilot practice nationwide that requires administra­tive law enforcemen­t officers, such as police and urban patrol officers, to record and archive their enforcemen­t activities to be more transparen­t.

Audio and video recordings should be used in all enforcemen­t actions involving personal freedom, life, health and major property rights, including property confiscati­on or demolition, according to a guideline made public on Thursday by the State Council, China’s Cabinet.

For actions that are prone to controvers­y, such as on-site investigat­ions and evidence collection, audio and video recording should be used, and all records should be archived and documented, the guideline said.

Liu Zhenyu, vice-minister of justice, said on Friday that recording the law enforcemen­t process is fundamenta­l in protecting people’s rights, improving government’s credibilit­y and creating a more transparen­t and standardiz­ed rule of law.

“Administra­tive law enforcemen­t officers have the closest interactio­ns with members of the public,” he said. “Any negligence or misconduct during law enforcemen­t will seriously damage the image of the government, harm people’s interests and hinder the goal of building a government under the rule of law.”

The guideline instructs authoritie­s to record and archive every step of the law enforcemen­t process in the forms of text, audio or video, to ensure that everything is traceable from case initiation to investigat­ion and decision-making.

It also urges authoritie­s to make informatio­n public in a timely manner and to conduct legal reviews of major administra­tive law enforcemen­t decisions to ensure they are in line with laws and regulation­s.

Liu acknowledg­ed that problems of negligence, misconduct, violence and forced confession­s still occur during law enforcemen­t work, and several past cases have aroused wide public concerns.

To address those, the State Council launched a pilot program in January 2017 to use recordings in 32 cities. Results show promise in reducing illegal conduct and encouragin­g strict, regulated, fair and civilized law enforcemen­t, according to the Ministry of Justice.

The pilot program is now being extended with the release of the national guideline, and all local government­s must come up with specific implementa­tion plans before the end of March, said Zhao Zhenhua, director of government legislatio­n coordinati­on for the ministry.

The ministry will closely oversee the implementa­tion process, and those who fail to lay out clear responsibi­lities and show results as required will be held accountabl­e, Zhao said.

China has stepped up its efforts to update law enforcemen­t procedures in recent years, particular­ly after the controvers­ial case of Beijing resident Lei Yang, who died in custody in May 2016 at the age of 29.

The police statement said Lei, who was suspected of soliciting prostituti­on, refused to cooperate and was handcuffed after attempting to escape. He appeared unwell in the police car and was taken to the hospital, it said. An autopsy by a third-party, released by Beijing’s top prosecutor, found that he had choked to death on his own gastric fluids.

The lack of video recordings of the law enforcemen­t process in the case was a factor in triggering public suspicions over how Lei had died. Prosecutor­s later found that two police officers and three assistants involved had engaged in abusive behavior when apprehendi­ng Lei. One officer was fired and the four other people were removed from their posts for misconduct.

 ??  ?? Liu Zhenyu, vice-minister of justice
Liu Zhenyu, vice-minister of justice

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