| H.E. Mr. JIA Chunwang, Procurator General of the Supreme People's Procuratorate of China made a statement at the opening session of the 16th United Nations Commission on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice | ||
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2007/04/23 |
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On April 23, 2007, H.E. Mr. JIA Chunwang, Procurator General of the Supreme People's Procuratorate of China attended the 16th Session of the United Nations Commission on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice which will be held in Vienna from 23 to 27 April, upon the invitation of H.E. Mr. Antonio Maria Costa, the Director General of the United Nations Office in Vienna and Executive Director of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. Procurator General JIA made a statement at the opening session of the Commission on the Status and Role of China's Procuratorates in the Field of Criminal Justice and Crime Prevention. The full text of the statement is as follows:
In In China, in accordance with the law, criminal prosecution is carried out in a system of the combined work of the public security organ, the procuratorial organ and the judicial organ, each having its own fields of responsibilities but working in coordination with each other and at the same time checking on each other. In criminal cases, public security organ is responsible for investigation, detention, arrest and interrogation; People's Procuratorate is responsible for authorization of arrest, and the investigation and prosecution of duty crimes such as bribery and corruption; People's Court is responsible for trial. It is stipulated in the Constitution and the relevant statutes that "the People's Procuratorates are responsible for legal supervision on criminal prosecution". People's Procuratorates supervise the investigation activities of the public security organ, trial procedures of the people's courts, the enforcement of judgments and sentences in criminal cases and the activities of prisons, detention houses, and labor reform organs. "People's Procuratorates exercise their prosecutorial power independently in accordance with the law, and shall not be intervened by the administrative organs, social groups and individuals." Crime prevention is an important component of To strengthen the effectiveness of criminal justice is a salient point in First, we adhere to the principle of punishing the crime but with full protection of offenders' human rights. The guilt must be punished but at the same time the constitutional principle that "the State respects and safeguards the human rights" must be fully observed. The legal rights and interests of the suspects and the accused should be properly safeguarded. Procuratorates make full use of their legal supervisory functions entrusted to them by the Constitution to ensure that the crime is punished and the human rights safeguarded in accordance with the law and that the basic principles such as punishment must be legally prescribed, punishment must fit the crime, equal application of the criminal law and open trial, etc., are implemented so as to make the guilt punished and the innocent be exonerated. Second, we pursue the criminal policy of tempering justice with mercy. During the course of executing the laws, the principle of suiting the punishment to the crime is always followed: the serious crime will be given heavy punishment; the minor crime light punishment; the punishment should suit the crime; the innocent will be declared "not guilty". When cases involving circumstances that are suited for lenient, mitigated or even remission of punishment, leniency should be considered according to the specific situations of the case and the law. If a judgment is deemed to be improper or wrong in contravention of the above policy, the People's Procuratorate can lodge a protest against it, and the judicial personnel found to have abused the power for personal benefits may be prosecuted for their criminal responsibility. Third, we uphold the principle of giving equal weight to process justice and substantive justice. At various phases of investigation, prosecution and trial, the process must be governed by the law, preventing tendencies of emphasizing substantive aspects over procedural ones and suppression of crime over protection of rights. The status of suspects and defendants in litigation process must be duly respected and their legal rights and interests such as right of defence and right to appeal must be guaranteed. These rights shall not be deprived of them or restricted. Getting confession through coercion and torture is strictly prohibited. In recent years, procuratorates have intensified legal supervision with stringent measures to deal with cases of using torture to obtain confession. They have been very effective in preventing and eventually eliminating such phenomena. Fourth, we adhere to the principle of judging according to the evidence, namely, we rely more on the evidence than confessions. In accordance with the law, the accused shall not be convicted solely on his or her confession in the absence of any other evidence, but a conviction can be given on the basis of solid and sufficient evidence even if without a confession from the accused. The conviction must be based on "the clear facts with solid and sufficient evidence". Procuratorates can, by way of exercising supervision over investigation and trial, rectify acts of illegally collecting evidence, listening only to one side, and totally relying on confessions. For cases that are without sufficient evidence, they can make the decision of nol-pros or repealing the prosecution before the sentence, to ensure full observance of this principle. In the criminal justice system of Mr. Chairman, UNODC, since its inception and especially under the leadership of Mr. Costa, has achieved a great many results in the field of crime prevention and criminal justice. |






