BEIJING (AFP) – A Chinese
teenager executed after being convicted of murder and rape 18 years ago was
declared innocent by a court Monday, in a rare overturning of a wrongful
conviction.
The 18-year-old, named
Hugjiltu and also known as Qoysiletu, was found guilty and put to death in
Inner Mongolia in 1996, but doubt was cast on the verdict when another man
confessed to the crime in 2005.
“The Inner Mongolia Higher
People’s Court finds Hugjiltu’s original guilty verdict… is not consistent with
the facts and there is insufficient evidence,” the court in Hohhot said in a
statement.
“Hugjiltu is found not
guilty.”
The retrial comes after a
pledge by leaders of the ruling Communist Party to strengthen the rule of law
“with Chinese characteristics” — a concept experts caution refers to greater
central control over the courts rather than judicial independence.
The court’s deputy president
gave Hugjiltu’s parents compensation of 30,000 yuan ($4,850), according to the
official Xinhua News Agency — although the money was a personal donation by the
head of the court, it added, rather than an official payment by the institution.
Images on social media
showed the deputy president apologising to Hugjiltu’s now elderly parents.
“This is an amazing thing
the court did, to admit that they were wrong,” said Wang Gongyi, deputy
director of the research institute of the Ministry of Justice.
“It also sends a clear
message to the police and prosecutors around the country: if there’s not enough
evidence, don’t impose wrongful convictions,” he told AFP.
“In the future, this case
will be singled out as what not to do and will influence the entire legal
system.”
Police in Hohhot, where the
crime took place, said they opened an investigation into the officers
responsible for the original case, according to the Legal Evening News.
The regional court said
Hugjiltu’s confession did not match the autopsy report as well as being
inconsistent with “other evidence”, and that DNA evidence presented at the
trial did not definitively connect him to the crime.
– Wrongful convictions –
China’s courts, controlled
by the ruling Communist Party, have a near-100 percent conviction rate in
criminal cases and confessions extracted under dubious conditions are
commonplace.
In Hugjiltu’s case,
authorities interrogated the teenager for 48 hours, after which he confessed to
having raped and choked the woman in the toilet of a textile factory, the
state-run China Daily newspaper reported in November. He was executed 61 days
after the woman’s death.
Hugjiltu’s family tried to
prove his innocence for nearly a decade, according to reports, and the Higher
People’s Court officially began a retrial in November.
Several high-profile
wrongful convictions have sparked public outrage in recent years.
Last year, a man who served
17 years in prison for killing his wife was declared innocent by an appeals
court in the eastern province of Anhui.
A few months earlier two men
who had been sentenced to death and life in prison in 2004 for the alleged rape
of a 17-year-old girl were also acquitted.
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