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SINO DAILY
Rights abuses persist in China despite plan to scrap camps: Amnesty
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Dec 17, 2013


Former China death row inmate awarded court payout
Beijing (AFP) Dec 17, 2013 - A Chinese man who was sentenced to death and spent 12 years in prison for the rape and murder of a child was awarded $160,000 compensation Tuesday after his conviction was overturned, a court said.

Li Huailiang stood trial seven times and was given three different sentences for the rape and murder of a 13-year-old girl in Pingdingshan in August 2001, the official Xinhua news agency said.

The farmer was condemned to death, then death with a two-year reprieve -- a Chinese sentence normally commuted to life in prison -- and after that, 15 years in jail.

Each time, the verdict was subsequently overturned "due to lack of evidence", but he was not formally acquitted until April this year, when he was released from prison, Xinhua said.

Li was not released earlier as he "had to await a further trial", it added.

The Intermediate People's Court in Pingdingshan, in the central province of Henan, granted him 780,000 yuan ($130,000) for the loss of "personal freedom" for 4,282 days spent in prison and a further 200,000 yuan for "psychological damage", a statement posted on its website said.

Li had claimed 3.79 million yuan in total, the statement added.

Abuses are widespread in China's legal system, where police routinely coerce confessions and courts have a near-perfect conviction rate.

Nonetheless a trickle of wrongful guilty verdicts have been overturned this year.

China's much-vaunted abolition of its widely loathed "re-education through labour" camps risks being no more than a cosmetic change because of other rights abuses, Amnesty International said Tuesday.

Arbitrary detention will persist in unofficial "black jails", drug rehabilitation centres and other facilities, the rights group said in a report.

The "re-education through labour" scheme, known as laojiao, was first instituted in the 1950s by the ruling Communist Party, which announced last month it plans to dismantle the system.

Under it, police panels can sentence offenders to up to four years in camps without a trial. It is largely used for petty offenders but is also blamed for rights abuses by officials seeking to punish "petitioners" who try to complain about them to higher authorities.

Amnesty welcomed the move but added: "Human rights defenders, democracy advocates, whistle-blowers and other political activists are being increasingly targeted through criminal detention, 'black jails', short-term administrative detention, and enforced disappearances."

There was a "very real risk that the Chinese authorities will abolish one system of arbitrary detention only to expand the use of other types" unless there was "a more fundamental change in the policies and practices that drive punishment of individuals and groups for nothing more than exercising their rights", it said.

The Amnesty report was based on more than 60 interviews conducted over the past four years with former labour camp inmates and other detainees, "most of whom were subjected to torture and other ill-treatment in detention", the group said.

A number of labour camps in Xinjiang, Jiangsu, Sichuan, Jilin and other provinces have been renamed as drug treatment centres offering "very little in the form of drug rehabilitation", it said.

They were operating "virtually identically" to laojiao facilities "where detainees can be held for years of harsh forced labour and ill-treatment", it said.

China says that it attaches great importance to human rights and that any detentions are carried out in accordance with the law.

The United Nations estimated in 2009 that as many as 190,000 people were held in the laojiao camps.

Pressure to change the deeply unpopular system has been mounting for years, and China's Communist Party leaders announced after a key gathering in Beijing last month that they would move to abolish it.

But they have so far released few details of how they plan to implement the change.

The Standing Committee of the National People's Congress, China's rubber-stamp parliament, is expected to take up the issue next week, the official Xinhua news agency reported Monday.

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