In China, “collective punishment” is being called into question more and more openly
Voices are being raised to question an old practice, anchored in the Chinese judicial system: collective punishment.
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When a Chinese person is convicted by the courts for a crime or misdemeanor, their loved ones also suffer the consequences and may be deprived of a certain number of rights: this is a practice which is not formally included in the legal texts, but which, in fact, is quite common. This is what lawyers call “collective punishment”.
This can translate, for example, into professional life. Relatives of a convicted person may be excluded from public service, no longer able to access a position in the army or enter a university. In some cases, relatives may also be refused Social Security benefits or encounter problems renewing a passport.
The Chinese press cites the example of a job offer published by a Shanghai court for clerk positions. The ad openly states that candidates must have a clean criminal record, but also their family members and their main social relations. The newspaper Caixin recently carried out a count: according to official figures, China recorded some 25 million convicted offenders in 2022. If we consider that each of these delinquents has on average three relatives, this means that these particularly unjust collective punishments affect a total of some 75 million Chinese, or one person in 18. Chinese who, however, are good citizens, respectful of the law, but who bear the brunt of the acts committed by their loved ones
But this practice is starting to come under criticism in China. A university professor in Beijing recently said that “collective punishments” carry collateral consequences, as they are called in China, that violate the Constitution. Other experts emphasize that criminal responsibility must be borne only by the person responsible for the act and not by others. An MP also criticized collective punishment.
But stopping a practice that has been anchored in Chinese society for a very long time cannot be done in a few days. Collective punishment has its supporters and also constitutes for the regime a very good means of deterrence and control of the population. International human rights organizations, for example, regularly accuse the Chinese authorities of attacking the families of imprisoned dissidents.