China's chief justice has hailed the decision to return the
right of review of all death penalty rulings to the Supreme
People's Court a success six months after the regulation was
passed, saying it was "neither too severe nor too lenient".
On January 1, 2007, the Supreme People's Court (SPC) retrieved
the right to review all death penalty decisions made by lower
courts, ending its 24-year absence in approving China's execution
verdicts.
"(Since then) executions have been justifiably exercised, the
policy has been properly carried out and there has been no social
unrest as a result of this matter," said Chief Justice Xiao Yang when addressing local justices in
southern Guangdong Province.
"The decrease of the country's crime rate since January
indicates that our efforts to be more careful when handing out the
death penalty have yielded good results," said Xiao.
"As China's chief justice, I have been so worried (about the
legal change) in the six months that all food became unpalatable to
me."
Xiao also called on provincial courts to double-check evidences
that are used to hand down death penalty, because it "lays the
basis for SPC's final review."
"In each case, whenever there is a doubt about whether execution
is the appropriate penalty, we should always be ready to drop it,"
Xiao added.
Earlier this year, Xiao urged "extreme caution" in handing down
death sentences, saying "capital punishment should be given only to
an 'extremely small number' of serious offenders".
Figures from the Beijing No 1 and No 2 intermediate people's
courts suggest that, in the first five months of 2007, the number
of death sentences dropped 10 percent from last year.
(Xinhua News Agency June 10, 2007)