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Man who spent 11 years on China's death row compensated
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Dec 29, 2015


Chinese carer killed eight elderly patients by poison: reports
Beijing (AFP) Dec 29, 2015 - A Chinese carer has confessed in court to killing her elderly patient in order to receive her salary early, and claims to have killed seven more, reports said Tuesday.

The deaths highlight weaknesses in the elderly care system in the country, whose vast population is ageing rapidly.

He Tiandi, 45, went on trial last week in the southern city of Guangzhou for the murder of a woman in her 70s.

According to local media reports, the victim's daughter-in-law had promised He a full month's wage in the event of her patient's death regardless of how many days she had worked.

After only four days of looking after the patient, He allegedly fed her broth spiked with sleeping pills and toxic chemicals, injected the potion into her belly and buttocks and finally garrotted her with a nylon rope, the Guangzhou Daily said.

"I didn't want someone else to get the money," she told the court, the paper reported.

During a police interrogation, He confessed to murdering another seven patients and attempting to kill two more by poisoning, the article said, adding that prosecutors did not press charges over these cases due to a lack of evidence.

There are deep demographic challenges in China, where holes in the social safety net have left many of the country's aged, and their children, desperate for assistance.

China now has more than 212 million people over 60, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.

"An increasing number of them will need the care of others in the near future," the China Daily said in an editorial about the murder case Tuesday.

While children "can put safety measures in place against those with bad or evil intentions... it should be possible for such care providers to be registered and vetted", it added.

The worries were reflected on social media.

"This is hard to bear," said one commentator. "The living environment of the elderly is bleak."

A Chinese man condemned to death three times for murder and who spent 11 years on death row before being cleared was awarded 1.27 million yuan ($200,000) compensation, reports said Tuesday.

Zeng Aiyun, once a graduate student at Xiangtan University in the central province of Hunan, was convicted in 2004 of murdering a fellow student and sentenced to die.

The verdict was set aside three times on appeal and new trials ordered, but on the first two retrials in 2005 and 2010 Zeng was again condemned to death.

Finally the Xiangtan Intermediate People's Court exonerated him for lack of evidence at his fourth trial in July.

It awarded him 1.27 million yuan in compensation on Monday, the official Xinhua news agency reported.

The court found another student to be the sole killer, it added. Chen Huazhang -- previously sentenced to life as Zeng's accomplice -- poisoned the victim out of jealousy, Xinhua said, and laid a false trail to implicate Zeng.

Zeng said he was not satisfied with the compensation and would go back to court once more to seek more, the Beijing Times reported Tuesday.

The case is the latest to highlight the risks of miscarriages of justice in China, where forced confessions are widespread and virtually all criminal defendants are found guilty.

Wrongful executions are not unknown in the country.

In a high-profile case that sparked nationwide public anger, a court in the northern region of Inner Mongolia last year cleared a man named Hugjiltu, who was convicted, sentenced and executed for rape and murder in 1996 at the age of 18.

The declaration of his innocence came nine years after another man confessed to the crime.

China's courts are politically controlled and the Communist Party has pledged to ensure the "rule of law with Chinese characteristics" and said it will lessen the influence of local officials over courts.

But the country's conviction rate remains close to 100 percent, with only 778 acquittals last year and nearly 1.2 million convictions, according to official data.


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