Death Penalty In China
Although the official number is a state secret, China is estimated to have a number near 3,000 executions per year, and when compared to the United States’ averaged sole 39 people per year, the tragedy is drawn out. The witnesses in trials are predetermined, prejudiced, and similarly-aligned law and order enforcers as to minimize potential waves of unrest. This nadir of judicial safeguards ensure unfair trails with a common conception of “first the verdict, second the trial.” Even in trails with death on the line, the prisoner only has a handful of days in which to file appeals and is denied non-guilty pleas by the judicial administration. On the other hand, arbitrary detention is the more preferred and common form of corrupt punishment within China. With the most common forms being, reeducation through labor and shelter and investigation, these detainees are not brought before a judge nor have the right to a lawyer, so police officers have complete control over a citizen’s future. Up to one million are ‘sheltered’ every year with camps lasting up to four years. Defendants are prevented from deductible innocence, instead their confessions are forced and they do not have hearings that are fair and public. Once inside of Chinese prisons and detention centers, ill-treatment is rampant. Lack of basic necessities—food and hygiene—as well as constant beatings and long periods of solitude continues to amount to China’s grade D on the topic. The UN Special Rapporteur on Torture estimates that in China there are around 1.2 million detainees, many living and have lived under these saturnine