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BEIJING, Oct. 25 (Xinhuanet) -- China, which has approximately 1.5million prison inmates, including some 19,000 juveniles, is borrowing ideas from other countries to reform its penal system.
"We have introduced psychological
treatment into Chinese prisons, borrowing ideas from Singapore and Canada," said
Vice Minister of Justice Fan Fangping at the annual general meeting of the
International Corrections and Prisons Association (ICPA), which opened here
Monday.
Most of the 670 prisons in China
are now equipped with facilities and personnel to give psychological treatment
to inmates, and some of them are working with universities and research
institutes on treatment and research programs.
"This is an example of how China
is combining its reality with advanced ideas from other countries," Fan noted.
"Many countries in the world are trying to turn more criminals into law-abiding
citizens through prisons and corrections, which is also the policy of the
Chinese government. We have much to exchange and share with them."
China became a member of the ICPA
in 2000. The organization, founded in 1999, has about 400 members from 80
countries and regions.
"China has been more and more
important since it joined ICPA and we are talking about a growing number of
issues openly with China," said Ole Ingstrup, president of ICPA, "I thought it
was the natural time to come here when China proposed to host the annual
meeting."
"As far as I know, China is doing
things just like what we do in our countries, only named differently. For
instance, the 'moral' teaching in Chinese prisons is very much similar with what
we call 'cognitive skills' building," he added.
China started a trial project on
community correction in 2002 in six provinces and municipalities, including
Beijing, Shanghai and east China's Jiangsu Province. Since 2003, every province
or autonomous region has started community correction in a pilot city.
"Other countries have done this
work before us, and we have learned from their experience to improve our
projects," Fan said. "The trial progressed smoothly and the projects have had
good effect."
Meanwhile, the Ministry is
thinking of updating the way it has categorized prisons for some five decades.
The ministry plans to divide
prisons into three types: low security, medium security and high security,
according to the harm their inmates might do to society, especially the violence
of the crimes for which they were incarcerated.
Currently the government sorts
prisons in two different ways. They are categorized by whether their inmates
have long or short terms, and there are also separate prisons for men and women
and education centers for juveniles.
The ministry is still working on
detailed plans for the new categorization policy while adjusting the standards
to evaluate the effect of correction.
"We will continue exchanging
information and working with our foreign counterparts in an effort to improve
the correction quality," Fan said.
More than 140 foreign researchers and officials are attending the
conference, during which they will visit four Chinese prisons.
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