Judges and legal scholars are calling for an independent
juvenile justice system in reaction to a sharp increase in offences
committed by people under the age of 18.
According to figures released at a seminar in Beijing Friday,
the number of convicted offenders in the first seven months of this
year was 23 percent higher than the same period last year. The
annual rate of increase from 2000 to 2004 was, on average, 14
percent.
Rape, robbery, theft, assault and fighting were the most
frequently committed offences by young offenders since 2002.
"An independent juvenile justice system should be established in
China," Wang Haining, a judge from the Xining Intermediate People's
Court in northwest China's Qinghai
Province, said at the seminar.
More than 3,400 juvenile tribunals have been established across
the country since 1984, when a district court in Shanghai
established the first one.
Stipulations in the Criminal Law and the Criminal Procedural Law
offer lighter punishments to juveniles and some special rights to
minors in criminal cases.
"However, I believe there should be a special juvenile criminal
law, juvenile criminal procedural law, and juvenile court," Wang
said.
His opinion was echoed by Wang Mu, a professor at the China
University of Political Science and Law (CUPL) and president of
the China Criminology Academy.
An independent juvenile justice system does not criminally
punish juveniles and aims to protect their legal rights as they
undergo correction, Wang Mu said.
"The core of a juvenile justice system is that minors are not
given adult punishments," he said. "It means that we must not use
criminal punishment prescribed for most of the juvenile crimes that
are defined by current laws."
Experiments in establishing juvenile courts have been tried in
major cities like Shanghai, Nanjing and Harbin.
In the absence of a juvenile court system in China, juvenile
tribunals have stepped up their efforts to help delinquent children
and protect their rights.
(China Daily September 17, 2005)