86 Society
used as evidence leading to his or her prosecution. The amendment specifi cally stipulates that a lawyer has the right to consult all fi les and materials related to the case he or she is dealing with and also has the right to collect evidence himself or herself.7
These amendments refl ect a signifi cant shift in attitudes towards a more independent legal system but there is no robust procedure to ensure that any of these rights will be enforced.8
People’s Courts
The court system in China has four levels. The Supreme People’s Court which sits in Beijing is the highest judicial organ in China and is formally responsible to the NPC and its Standing Committee. It tries the most signifi cant cases, hears appeals against the decisions of lower-level courts and supervises the operation of local courts and special courts. The second tier consists of approximately thirty Higher People’s Courts which sit in the capital cities of provinces and autonomous regions and in the major cities which have been accorded independent municipal status. The third tier courts are the 400 or so Intermediate People’s Courts which are based in the administrative centres of prefectures, certain other towns and the districts of larger cities. Intermediate People’s Courts try criminal cases and have jurisdiction in cases carrying the death sentence, subject to any appeals to the Higher Court. Basic, or primary-level, People’s Courts, of which there are over 3,000, are the lowest level courts and sit in all counties and in many cities. In addition they have the authority to establish People’s Tribunals to handle local cases and it is estimated that there are as many as 20,000 such tribunals.9 Lawyers from China participate in a number of cooperative training programmes with their counterparts from the United Kingdom, United States and Canada – programmes designed to examine ways of implementing a fairer and more transparent judicial system in China. The fact that such programmes exist and are considered necessary by both international and Chinese lawyers is an indication of the problems faced by China in creating a system that is considered fair and open by international standards. Until the recommendations that have emerged from these programmes have been fully implemented there is no guarantee that any criminal trials in China will be fair and there is substantial evidence that many are not carried out fairly.
Prison and pre-trial detention
Prison conditions in China are generally acknowledged to be extremely grim. The few modern prisons in the more advanced cities may approach Western standards of hygiene and security, but this is far from the norm. Amnesty International and other organisations have consistently expressed concern about conditions in prisons and in the laogai (reform through labour) and laojiao (education through labour) camps and the harsh regimes in these camps has also been revealed in research
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