Public procurators are helping to stop torture and other abuses
in China's prisons, according to China's Supreme People's
Procuratorate (CSPP).
Procurators monitoring prisons, detention centers and
reform-through-labor camps have unveiled 11,260 cases of prisoner
abuse in the last four years since 2002. They have resolved 10,793
cases and prosecuted 425 people involved in 388 cases, show figures
from the CSPP, the highest procuratorial organ of China.
Illegal activities involve mainly torture and extortion,
miscalculation of prison terms and improper commutations of
sentences, and release on probation.
The Organic Law of the People's Procuratorates of China
stipulates that procuratorates have the right to supervise
enforcement of verdicts and activities in penal institutions.
Procuratorates must also inform appeal courts if they find any
criminal cases are tried and judged improperly. They are also held
responsible for monitoring and reporting illegal activities in
institutions.
Procuratorates have been stationed in penal institutions since
1978, said Zhao Hong, deputy procurator-general with the CSPP.
Last year, 75 procuratorial departments with 1,432 procurators
were operating in 25 provinces, autonomous regions and
municipalities to monitor 243 prisons, 78 reform-through-labor
centers and 21 detention houses, said Bai Quanmin, an official with
the Supreme People's Procuratorate, on Monday.
The heads and their deputies of the 75 procuratorial organs are
rotated every five years while rank and file procurators are moved
every two years to prevent them developing improper relationships
with prison officers.
China ratified the United Nations Convention against Torture and
Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment in
1988.
The procurators' work showed that the government had established
a dual supervision mechanism to protect the rights of prisoners and
those in custody, said Prof. Hu Wei, of prestigious Shanghai
Jiaotong University.
(Xinhua News Agency April 11, 2006)