Beijing’s new and improved execution method, lethal injection in lieu of bullet in the head
In Beijing the authorities have built a facility next to a prison outside the city’s limits that houses most of the capital's death row inmates. It is here that lethal injections will be performed, the China Daily reported.
In the meantime would-be executioners are being trained on how to administer the injections, and medical staff is learning how to supervise the use of drugs, monitor executions and confirm deaths.
Hu Yunteng, head of the Supreme People's Court's research bureau, said that lethal injection (legalised in 1997) was a cleaner, safer and more convenient way of executing prisoners than the old-fashioned bullet through the head.
“It is considered more humane as it reduces the criminals' fear and pain compared with gunshot execution,” Mr Hu said.
Last year some 1,700 people were executed in mainland China. This represents 70 per cent of the total number of executions world-wide.
However, off-the-record Communist Party members have acknowledged that in past years up to 10,000 people have been executed.
In late 2006 the Supreme People's Court resumed the power to review death sentences. This has led to an apparent drop in the number of executions, but overall figures remain a “state secret”.
At the same time though, human rights activists have accused Chinese prison authorities of involvement in the trafficking of organs taken from executed prisoners as well as of carrying out executions “à la carte” according to organ market demands based on death row inmates’ physical traits.
For this reason some people suspect that execution by lethal injection was adopted in order to better preserve organs for sale.