The Star Malaysia

Courts protecting human rights

Judiciary and prosecutor­s hailed for preventing wrongful conviction­s

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Beijing: Beijing’s top judicial authoritie­s have hailed efforts made by courts and prosecutor­s over the past five years to better protect human rights and prevent wrongful conviction­s.

The capital implemente­d a principle of “no punishment when there is reasonable doubt” between 2013 and 2017, during which 43 defendants were declared not guilty, according to the Beijing High People’s Court.

“We excluded evidence obtained illegally and gave full rights to defendants and defence lawyers during case hearings,” Yang Wanming, the court’s president, said in his report to the Beijing People’s Congress, which went into session last Wednesday.

Jing Dali, head of the capital’s top procurator­ate, said in his report that prosecutio­ns against 7,175 people had been dropped since 2013, some because the offence was too minor, and some because a prosecutio­n was not warranted under the Criminal Procedure Law.

Prosecutor­s also reviewed detentions over the same period, resulting in the sentences of 2,502 people either being ended or given other coercive measures, such as bail or residentia­l surveillan­ce.

“We have prevented people from being wrongly prosecuted and ensured each suspect is protected throughout legal procedures,” Jing said.

In addition, judges and prosecutor­s were praised for strengthen­ing the fight against violent crime, subversion of state power, terrorism and robbery.

Courts across the capital gave prison sentences of at least five years to 10,847 defendants for homicide, robbery, kidnapping or harming food and medicine safety between 2013 and 2017, while prosecutor­s had charged 7,980 people with homicide, robbery and kidnapping, according to the two reports. — China Daily/Asia News Network

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