Bangkok Post

Vendor’s execution draws criticism of legal system

-

BEIJING: A Chinese street vendor convicted of killing two city officials was executed yesterday despite calls for leniency, disappoint­ing legal activists and many members of the public who say the country’s justice system fails to protect the underprivi­leged and punishes them too harshly.

China’s social media, which has been in a lull over social issues because of a government crackdown on potentiall­y libelous speech, lit up over the execution of Xia Junfeng, making it one of the most discussed and searched topics of the day.

Xia, who grilled meat skewers at a street-side stand in the northeaste­rn city of Shenyang, stabbed two urban management officers to death with a knife in May 2009 in a room into which he was taken over an infraction.

Xia said it was self-defence after the two officers beat him. The trial court ruled out the possibilit­y, saying it saw no evidence of that, and convicted him of murder.

But his argument resonated with a public that has become disgusted over the impunity with which city officials impose local codes on street peddlers — often with violence. Several video clips of public beatings by the urban management officials — known as chengguan in Chinese — have gone viral in China in recent years.

Some people compared his case to that of Gu Kailai, the wife of fallen politician Bo Xilai, whose death sentence for murder was suspended.

‘‘I am no legal expert, but I know a simple rule: If Gu Kailai can be spared of her life for a premeditat­ed murder, then Xia Junfeng should not die,’’ said Yao Bo, a well-known online commentato­r.

Author Yi Chen called the Supreme Court’s failure to halt Xia’s execution ‘‘crazy’’ and wrote ‘‘justice is dead’’.

‘‘His life and death are more than just a legal matter, but a bellwether of the era, with the tsunami-like public opinion firmly on the side of Xia Junfeng,’’ Yi Chen wrote in online comments.

Xia was convicted in 2009, and a higher court later upheld the verdict. His family made a last-ditch appeal arguing that there were unanswered questions in the prosecutio­n in their submission to the Supreme Court, which must approve all executions. But the appeal was rejected.

Shenyang Intermedia­te People’s Court said yesterday that the Supreme Court — in ratifying the death sentence — found Xia’s crime to be ‘‘extremely vile’’ and his method ‘‘extremely cruel’’.

Xia’s wife, Zhang Jing, was notified early yesterday morning of her last chance to see her husband before the execution.

‘‘I swear I will not cry again, so that my dear man can go in peace,’’ Zhang posted on her microblog.

A group of 25 human rights lawyers issued a joint statement on Wednesday condemning the prosecutio­n of Xia.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand