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Launch of a petition calling for an end to secrecy surrounding the death penalty in China

25 February 2008

The World Coalition against the Death Penalty has launched a petition asking the Chinese authorities to remove the State Secret classification of the death penalty and encouraging them to implement a moratorium on executions in agreement with the resolution on a worldwide moratorium adopted by the UN General Assembly in December. The State Secret classification means that no official information on sentencing and executions is made public yet it is believed that China executes more prisoners than any other country in the world. Public debate within China on this issue would only be possible if the State Secret were to be lifted. Penal Reform International, as an active member of the Coalition, urges supporters of abolition, other organisations and the media to sign the petition and circulate it as widely as possible.

The petition and further information including leaflets and other materials are available at:
http://www.worldcoalition.org/modules/xpetitions/index.php?id=2

Text of the petition:

The Olympic Charter reminds that the spirit of the Games is based on “respect for universal fundamental ethical principles” and aims to place sport “at the service of the harmonious development of man, with a view to promoting a peaceful society concerned with the preservation of human dignity”. Yet, 7,500 to 8,000 persons are estimated to have been executed in China in 2006, according to information gathered by the US-based Dui Hua Foundation.

The death penalty in China means:
- nearly 80% of executions across the world in 2006;
- an ongoing State Secret as regards data on sentences and executions;
- frequent use of torture to extract confessions;
- accumulation of miscarriages of justice following hasty and unfair trials.

We note however with interest that the Chinese Government recently introduced important reforms requiring the Supreme Court review of all death sentences, which could eventually significantly reduce the use of the death penalty.
As is the case in Hong Kong, which abolished the death penalty in 1993, and a majority of other countries across the world, China can and must end use of the death penalty.

We, citizens of the world, demand that the Chinese authorities lift the State Secret and ensure transparency in the practice of the death penalty in China. In agreement with the resolution on a moratorium on the use of the death penalty adopted on 18 December 2007 by the General Assembly of the United Nations that calls upon all states that still maintain capital punishment to establish a moratorium on executions with a view to abolishing the death penalty, we invite the Chinese authorities to ensure that their country is part of the universal trend towards abolition of the death penalty by introducing an immediate moratorium on executions.

Sign the petition online: http://www.worldcoalition.org/modules/xpetitions/index.php?id=2
 
Further information: PRI is currently running a two year project (2007-09) on the abolition of the death penalty and alternatives to life imprisonment in four world regions: Middle East and North Africa (MENA), Central Asia, Eastern Europe and the Russian Federation, and South Caucasus.
The project, co-financed by the European Commission, and implemented through PRI’s regional offices, aims to positively challenge society’s attitudes towards the death penalty and support government and civil society efforts in progressing towards full abolition of the death penalty in law. It also aims to influence the introduction of alternative sanctions to the death penalty in countries which have already abolished or are nearing abolition.

 
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