The Ministry of Public Security has promised to take action to improve murder
investigations and prevent abuses during interrogation.
Speaking at a press conference, He Ting, director of the ministry's criminal
investigation bureau, said that police from all parts of the country would be
encouraged to videotape all murder case interrogations, a practice already
standard in eastern coastal regions such as Shanghai and Jiangsu.
"We did not make it obligatory, because police bureaus in some poor western
areas cannot afford the recording equipment," He added.
Prosecution departments, which operate independently of the police, will ask
detainees to sign a form to say whether they have been forced into making
confessions. A special room will be set up in all police stations for
prosecutors, the ministry said.
In addition, the ministry has requested local police bureaus to issue a
public report each month on the progress of murder investigations.
"Police must guarantee the quality of their work, and punish criminals and
not innocent people," He reiterated.
Last year, China freed a man named She Xianglin, who spent 11 years in jail
for allegedly murdering his wife, after the woman turned up alive.
In another case last June, the children of a butcher named Teng Xingshan, who
was executed for murdering a waitress, appealed against his conviction after the
woman returned home alive.
"There have been some unjust cases in the past few years, " He admitted. "But
they were very rare."
"We have taken measures against the practice of forced confessions, and no
such cases have been discovered recently."
He said violators would be punished severely according to law, but he did not
mention what the punishments were.
The ministry also revealed that about 90 per cent of 31,000 murder cases last
year were solved, higher than 63 per cent in the United States and 87 per cent
in Britain.
And the number of murder cases per 100,000 population was 2.39, far less than
the 5.6 in the United States, for example.
"This is due to good police work," He said, "We place murder cases as our top
priority, as such cases greatly jeopardize social stability."
"But to achieve the goal set in 2004 that each murder case must be solved,
further efforts are needed."
In China there are eight categories of murder manslaughter, intentional
injury, explosion, poisoning, arson, robbery, rape and kidnapping cases that
involve the killing of a person.
Ministry figures show that about 66.7 per cent of the total murder cases were
manslaughter, and more than 60 per cent of the cases were caused by civil
disputes such as divorce or neighbourhood quarrels.
And the eastern coastal regions witnessed more murder cases than the western
areas, something the ministry blamed on uneven economic development.