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SINO DAILY
Suspected killer on trial in China wrongful execution case
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Jan 05, 2015


Communist chief of China's Nanjing city probed
Shanghai (AFP) Jan 05, 2015 - The leader of the Chinese city of Nanjing is under investigation for "severe violations of discipline and law", Beijing's corruption watchdog said, the latest in a series of probes against senior party officials.

"Nanjing city party secretary Yang Weize, suspected of severe violations of discipline and law, is now under investigation," the party's Central Commission for Discipline Inspection said in a statement late Sunday.

It gave no further details but the phrase is usually code for graft, which has become endemic in China.

Just over a year ago, Nanjing's mayor Ji Jianye was removed for corruption, and prosecutors said in December that he would be tried for bribery.

Ji was expelled from the ruling party last January for having "received a huge amount of money and gifts either by himself or through his family members".

It was unclear whether the two cases were linked, the China Daily newspaper said Monday.

Yang, 52, who held the post since early 2011, has spent his entire political career in his native province of Jiangsu, of which Nanjing is the capital.

His previous posts include party secretary of Wuxi city and mayor of Suzhou, as well as jobs in the province's transport department, according to his official biography, which remains online.

Chinese leader Xi Jinping launched a drive against corruption after he came to power in late 2012, vowing to target both high-level "tigers" and low-ranking "flies".

But analysts say China has failed to implement institutional safeguards against corruption, such as an independent judiciary and free media, leaving anti-graft campaigns subject to the influence of politics.

In another recent case believed to involve corruption, a Chinese assistant foreign minister, Zhang Kunsheng, has been dismissed from his post and placed under investigation, the foreign ministry said on Friday.

A man who confessed to murdering a woman in China 18 years ago went on trial Monday, three weeks after a court cleared a teenager who was wrongfully executed for the crime.

The Intermediate People's Court in Hohhot, the capital of China's northern Inner Mongolia region, opened the proceedings against Zhao Zhihong and is expected to announce a verdict this week, according to a statement on its official microblog.

The case -- which has highlighted the shortcomings in China's Communist Party-controlled legal system -- centres on the rape and choking to death of a woman in the toilet of a Hohhot textile factory in 1996.

Soon after the incident, an 18-year-old named Hugjiltu was interrogated for 48 hours, after which he confessed to the crime. He was convicted, sentenced and executed for the crime 61 days after the woman was killed.

Hugjiltu's family tried for years to prove his innocence.

In 2005 Zhao was apprehended by authorities and confessed to more than a dozen rapes and murders, including the 1996 case, but the killing was not among nine for which he was tried the following year.

That court has not issued a verdict in the case, and Zhao has been under detention ever since.

Late last year the Hohhot court officially began a retrial of Hugjiltu, clearing him in December on grounds of "insufficient evidence".

It said in an online post that his parents would receive more than two million yuan ($330,000) in compensation.

Acquittals in China's Communist-controlled court system are extremely rare -- 99.93 percent of defendants in criminal cases were found guilty 2013, according to official statistics.

The use of force to extract confessions remains widespread in the country and defendants often do not have effective defence in criminal trials, leading to regular miscarriages of justice.

China cut the number of capital crimes from 68 to 55 in 2011. According to a report by US-based rights group the Dui Hua Foundation, it executed 2,400 people in 2013, down from 10,000 a decade ago.

China has occasionally exonerated wrongfully executed convicts after others came forward to confess their crimes, or in some cases because the supposed murder victim was later found alive.

But the Communist Party is attempting to reduce public anger over injustices by lessening the influence of local officials over some court cases, and reversing verdicts in some high-profile cases.


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SINO DAILY
China to give parents of wrongfully executed man $330,000
Beijing (AFP) Dec 31, 2014
A Chinese court will give the parents of a teenager wrongfully executed for murder and rape 18 years ago more than two million yuan ($330,000) compensation, it said Wednesday. Hugjiltu, who was convicted, sentenced and executed in 1996 at the age of 18, was exonerated earlier this month by a court in Inner Mongolia, nine years after another person confessed to the crime, in a case that highl ... read more


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