The Commercial Appeal

China TV shows last hours of condemned

- By William Wan The Washington Post

BEIJING — In an unusual action that quickly sparked debate online, Chinese authoritie­s showed a live broadcast Friday of four foreign drug smugglers in their last hours before execution for killing 13 fishermen.

A shocking and apparently unpreceden­ted form of reality TV for China, the program on state-run television featured all the staples of modern current events coverage, including experts, pundits and instant analysis. It cut away as the convicted men were being led from their cells, hands tied up with rope, toward their lethal injections.

The reaction was immediate and polarized, with many online questionin­g the ethics of the broadcast, as well as China’s use of the death penalty. The exact number of annual executions in China is considered a state secret, but Amnesty Internatio­nal estimates that it could be thousands, which would be more than the rest of the world combined.

Some legal experts questioned whether the broadcast violated rules against parading prisoners before their executions. Others simply said it was inhumane.

One magazine columnist named Lian Peng criticized the program as ghoulish propaganda, saying on China’s Twitterlik­e microblogs, “Even if it’s just the preparatio­n before execution, the exclusive interviews before dying, the interpreta­tion of experts and making the public watch, all of it humiliated people’s dignity without a doubt.”

The four executed were convicted of killing 13 Chinese fishermen on the Mekong River in Myanmar, also known as Burma. Their alleged ringleader was a Burmese man. The others were Thai, Laotian and one unknown nationalit­y.

Many Chinese comments online also heaped scorn on the four men for the killings.

One blogger with the handle “A Good Citizen of Big Country” argued such executions don’t happen enough: “Many so-called elites call for abolishing the death penalty, saying it’s against human rights. Human rights should be the right to survive first of all.”

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