Nie Shubin was 20 years old when he faced a firing squad in 1995, two days after being convicted of rape and murder.
hina's top court on Friday cleared a man executed 21 years ago for murder -- more than a decade after another man confessed to the killing -- in the latest miscarriage of justice in the Communist-ruled country.
Nie Shubin was 20 years old when he faced a firing squad in 1995, two days after being convicted of rape and murder.
"The
Supreme People's Court believes that the facts used in the original
trial were unclear and the evidence insufficient, and so changes the
original sentence to one of innocence," it said in a statement on a verified social media account.
Chinese
courts have a conviction rate of 99.92 percent, and concerns over
wrongful verdicts are fuelled by police reliance on forced confessions
and the lack of effective defence in criminal trials.
Overseas
rights groups say China executes more people than any other contry,
but Beijing does not give figures on the death penalty, regarding the
statistics as state secrets.
Nie was
convicted of raping and murdering a woman whose body was discovered by
her father in a corn field on the outskirts of Shijiazhuang city, in the
northern province of Hebei.
But
the time, method and motive for the murder could not be confirmed, and
key documents related to witnesses and the defendant's testimony were
missing, the supreme court said.
The "primary evidence was that Nie Shubin's confession of guilt corroborated the other evidence", but "there are doubts over the truth and legality of his confession of guilt", the statement added.
Nie's
family had been campaigning for justice since a serial murderer
arrested in 2005 confessed to the killing. But the case was only
formally reopened in 2014.
"Thanks to all those who helped on Nie Shubin's case!" his mother, Zhang Huanzhi, 72, said on social media.
'Inquisition by torture'
The Hebei high court, which convicted and executed Nie, "expressed deep, deep regrets" to his relatives and would investigate "possible illegal problems related to the trial" soon, according to state broadcaster CCTV.
But Liu Fujin,
one of the defence lawyers involved, said the court had been unwilling
to reconsider the case for years because no one would take
responsibility for a mistaken verdict.
He had applied to see documents related to the case 54 times to no avail, he told AFP.
"So
many examination statements and documents have been tampered with or
lost; how could they let lawyers look at documents messed with to such
an extent?" he said.
Though the verdict was a "landmark" and China's judicial system had improved since the 1990s, he said, many injustices remain unaddressed.
"Every province and every region has old cases just like Nie?s and new ones coming up that are all still being suppressed," he said.
"Trial
dossiers and evidence in favour of defendants are still being
concealed, and inquisition by torture is happening every day."
In
2014, an Inner Mongolian court declared innocent Hugjiltu, who had been
executed at age 18 in 1996 for rape and murder -- only for another man
to confess to the crime later. Last February, China "penalised" 27
officials involved, issuing them demerits.
William Nee, China researcher for Amnesty International, which campaigns against capital punishment, said: "There
are many severe flaws in China's application of the death penalty, and
the only way they can really ensure that this sort of tragic case
doesn?t occur in the future is by abolishing it."
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