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    China / Cover Story

    Revised criminal law to give suspects greater protection

    By Zhao Yinan (China Daily) Updated: 2012-03-12 07:34

    Legislation set to be voted on by the NPC enshrines rights of those held in custody, Zhao Yinan reports in Beijing.

    When Zhang Guoxi returned to his office from lunch one Thursday afternoon in July 2010, a team of anti-corruption investigators was already waiting for him.

    What followed, according to court documents, was a month of interrogations that eventually resulted in the construction official admitting that he accepted 76,000 yuan ($12,000) in bribes.

    Revised criminal law to give suspects greater protection

    Lang Sheng (left), deputy director of the Legislative Affairs Commission of the National People's Congress Standing Committee, and Li Shouwei, deputy director of the commission's office for criminal law, talk to the media in Beijing on Thursday. [Feng Yongbin / China Daily]

    When the case went to trial, however, judges deemed the confession inadmissible due to allegations it had been obtained illegally.

    It was a landmark decision, and National People's Congress deputies are set to vote on a revised Criminal Procedure Law that is aimed at further protecting the rights of suspects in custody and preventing forced confessions.

    Public security bureaus have relied heavily on self-incrimination to solve criminal cases, said Tian Wenchang, director of the All-China Lawyers Association's criminal committee.

    Revised criminal law to give suspects greater protection

    "These changes (to the law) will, hopefully, reduce the risks during interrogations and improve the investigative tactics used by the police," he said.

    A draft of the amended law was released to the public in September and received roughly 80,000 comments, either on e-mail or through the official website of the NPC, the country's top legislative body.

    While most people acknowledged the progress being made, the media attention at home and abroad largely focused on several clauses that would have allowed police to detain suspects without informing families for up to six months.

    In the version set to go before this year's plenary session of the NPC, almost all the controversial aspects appear to have been omitted.

    Wang Zhaoguo, a senior lawmaker, explained to deputies on Monday that the draft now states that public security bureaus must inform a suspect's family within 24 hours of their detention.

    The only exceptions, he added, would be when the case is "related to State security or terrorism", or if informing the family would "impede an investigation".

    Cautious, courageous

    At the time of his arrest, Zhang Guoxi, held a key post in the construction department of a government-funded holiday village in Ningbo, a booming city in East China's Zhejiang province.

    Timeline

    1954

    Criminal Procedure Law is first listed on the country's legislation agenda.

    1956

    Work starts on the first draft of the law.

    1957

    Drafting of the law is halted as China is enveloped in political unrest.

    1962

    A working panel of about 20 members is set up to resume drafting the law.

    1963

    Drafting is again halted in the early stages of the "cultural revolution" (1966-76).

    1979

    Drafting is resumed and Criminal Procedure Law is put into force, 25 years after the project was initiated.

    1996

    About 100 clauses are added in an amendment to keep the law up to date with social and economic developments. 

    According to records released after his trial in March last year, anti-corruption officers detained him without a warrant. The suspect said he was interrogated for three days, first in a hotel room and then in a prosecutor's office, and was given only a few hours of sleep.

    He said that at no time did investigators produce documents authorizing his detention or take any written testimony.

    After three months, Zhang said he was transferred to a detention house in Shaoxing, where he was allowed to sleep four hours a day.

    "They made me assemble strings of colored lights, fixing 100 colored bulbs to a 8-meter-long cable," he told China Daily on March 6. "I had to finish at least 27 strings every day, which was impossible for a new hand. I kept working until my fingers were blistered."

    When the case reached the courtroom, prosecutors for Ningbo's Yinzhou district accused Zhang of taking 76,000 yuan from contractors in exchange for lucrative construction projects between 2005 and 2008. As evidence, they presented a signed confession.

    However, the defendant said he had received only 6,000 yuan, while his attorney, Jiang Jiangao, said his client's testimony had been illegally extracted with the use of violence.

    In an unprecedented move, the panel of three judges sided with the defendant and threw out the confession. Court records quote the presiding judge as saying that the initial investigation into Zhang was "flawed" and that the "testimony should be excluded".

    The panel went on to return a guilty verdict, yet as the "value and harm (of the bribes) were minimal", the defendant received no criminal punishment. He was, however, sacked from his job.

    In an interview with China Daily last week, Jiang, who is currently appealing 42-year-old Zhang's conviction at an intermediate court, called the decision to reject the signed confession "cautious but courageous", and said it "casts light on future judicial rulings".

    Soon after the events in Ningbo, the Supreme People's Court also issued a warning to law enforcement agencies to prevent forced confessions.

    "I've heard that judges in other places have failed to (dismiss disputed evidence) under similar circumstances, either because they were fearful about challenging prosecutors or just disregarded procedural justice," said Chen Guangzhong, a leading expert on criminal proceedings.

    If the NPC votes to approve the revised law, analysts say it will not only provide institutional support for similar rulings, but it will also be the first time China's 30-year-old criminal procedure code has embodied the constitutional spirit of protecting human rights.

    Li Zhaoxing, spokesman for the NPC, told a news conference that the draft to be tabled at this year's plenary session identifies human rights protection as an essential principle.

    "It's slow progress," admitted law professor Chen Weidong at Renmin University of China, "but legislation is a gradual thing, in which improvements are made little by little."

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