Three new criminal tribunals under China's Supreme People's
Court, established to review certain death sentence cases of
provincial courts, has begun to work on April 1.
They will firstly begin to review the cases and give their
opinions. "They do not yet formally have the right to review and
make final decisions on death sentence cases," said Chen
Guangzhong, a consultant to the Supreme People's Court.
He declined to say when the three tribunals will formally regain
this power.
Staff for the three tribunals, who are undergoing a month of
training in Beijing, are selected from various regional courts
through a series of rigorous examination processes.
"They are all very brilliant judges," said a teacher in the
training class.
The supreme court currently reviews and makes final decisions on
some kinds of death penalty cases, including in economic crime, but
gives the power on some kinds of death penalty cases to provincial
courts.
It announced a decision last October to take back the power from
provincial courts in the near future.
The move appears to be a response to many Chinese media reports
in recent years, which exposed wrongful death penalty sentences,
sparking public debate.
Putting together brilliant judges to review death sentences is
believed to be effective in preventing wrong convictions to better
protect human rights.
(Xinhua News Agency April 3, 2006)