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Torture 'deeply entrenched' in Chinese justice system: UN watchdog
by Staff Writers
Geneva (AFP) Dec 9, 2015


Hong Kong protester to plead 'not guilty' over police attacks
Hong Kong (AFP) Dec 9, 2015 - A Hong Kong pro-democracy protester entered a "not guilty" plea Wednesday over allegations he assaulted police -- a day after officers accused of beating him also pleaded not guilty.

Political activist Ken Tsang stands accused of splashing liquid on police officers during mass street rallies last year -- the same night as he was beaten in an attack captured by television cameras and beamed around the world.

He pleaded "not guilty" to five charges -- two of assaulting a police officer and three of resisting a police officer -- at a court hearing Wednesday and is set to be tried in April.

Seven policemen will also stand trial for the assault on Tsang, which took place at the height of the protests seeking free leadership elections in Hong Kong.

The officers said they would plead "not guilty" at a court hearing Tuesday.

Tsang, a member of the pro-democracy Civic Party, said he could make no comment on the case when asked by AFP at court Wednesday.

He posed for photographers outside court with around 20 supporters carrying yellow umbrellas, symbol of the democracy movement.

"Thanks everyone. I'll keep going," he said.

Tsang's case has been mired in controversy after it took a year for the officers accused of the assault on him to be brought to court.

Tsang, 40, presented his case to a UN Committee Against Torture in Geneva last month.

Video footage aired by local television network TVB showed a group of men hauling a handcuffed Tsang to a dark corner in a public park in the early hours of October 15 last year.

One stands over him and punches him, as three others are seen repeatedly kicking him, in a case that rocked the reputation of the city's respected police force.

Tsang has accused the police of bringing assault charges against him to distract from his case against them.

The officers he is accused of attacking are not the same officers accused of assaulting him.

Tsang has slammed the allegations as "unreasonable and ridiculous".

A UN watchdog on Wednesday urged China to end the rampant use of torture in its prisons, close all "black jails" and halt a large-scale crackdown on lawyers and activists.

The UN Committee Against Torture also voiced alarm over deaths in custody and a lack of accountability for perpetrators of abuse.

The 10-member committee, which periodically reviews the records of the 156 countries that have ratified an international convention against torture, issued its report after questioning a large Chinese delegation about the country's record last month.

The investigators had praise for some changes in the law, including a 2012 amendment that bars the use of confessions extracted by torture as evidence in criminal proceedings.

George Tugushi, one of the panel's top investigators, however told reporters that "sometimes there is a distance between theory and practice."

"The committee remains seriously concerned over consistent reports indicating that the practice of torture and ill-treatment is still deeply entrenched in the criminal justice system, which overly relies on confessions as the basis for convictions," the report said.

A report by Amnesty International last month detailed how suspects received electric shocks, were punched, kicked, hit with shoes or bottles filled with water, denied sleep and locked in iron chairs forcing them into painful postures for hours on end.

- Interrogation chairs -

While some of these practices are banned by laxly implemented laws, others are sanctioned, the committee noted.

Jens Modvig, another top committee investigator, voiced particular concern over the use of so-called interrogation chairs, which the Chinese delegation insisted were needed to keep detainees from escaping or injuring themselves or their interrogators.

He said during last month's hearing that "in a detention place there (should be) no need for restraints."

"There are no time limits to how long such an interrogation can take place, which in itself probably amounts to ill-treatment and could easily amount to torture," he said, adding: "This is a sanctioned method of interrogation which is used everywhere."

The committee also voiced alarm over China's alleged use of so-called black jails, or secret detention facilities -- something China's delegation denied.

The committee voiced particular concern over a recent law change allowing a person to be held under "residential surveillance at a designated location" for up to six months, noting that these locations were often kept secret.

This, it said, may place detainees "at a high risk of torture and ill-treatment."

"This is in fact legitimising secret detention," Modvig said.

The report also warned that suspects in many cases lack adequate access to lawyers, insisting that suspects should be held for no more than 48 hours before talking to an attorney, instead of the currently permitted 37 days.

And it voiced alarm over "escalating abuses" targeting lawyers themselves.

The report said more than 200 lawyers and activists had been rounded up in an "unprecedented" crackdown since July, and that 25 reportedly remain under residential surveillance and four are allegedly unaccounted for.

The committee has given Beijing a year to detail progress towards complying with the Convention Against Torture.


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