Chinese province taps thieves with execution (Reuters) Updated: 2006-02-27 14:49 Courts in China's southern province of Guangdong
will introduce harsher penalties, including death, to deter motorcycle-riding
purse snatchers who sometimes chop off the hands of victims who resist, a
newspaper said.
A gang of
motorcycle-riding purse snatchers are busted in a Guangzhou Street.
[Guangzhou Daily] |
Guangdong's courts have heard more than 64,000 cases of such high-speed
thefts and other kinds of armed robbery in the past three years, and convicted
nearly 85,000 suspects, accounting for one third of all people found guilty of
crimes, the Yangcheng Evening News said.
The extreme cruelty of local gangsters when attempting to steal anything from
cell phones to earrings to purses have caused public outrage and widespread fear
across the province.
To ease the "grave situation", the province's high court, prosecutor's office
and police bureau issued guidelines over the weekend authorising violent
purse-grabbers to face stiff armed robbery charges, as opposed to the lighter
sentences for ordinary theft they used to face, the newspaper said in a report
seen on Monday.
The penalties for armed robbery range from lengthy jail terms to execution,
it said.
"The guideline will surely scare the thieves a lot," the newspaper quoted the
deputy head of the high court as saying.
Crime has soared along with the economic boom of Guangdong, which borders
Hong Kong, in the past two decades as tens of millions of migrants from other
parts of China have moved to the area to find manufacturing jobs.
It is common for people to carry their bags in knapsacks in front of their
chests instead of on their backs in many Guangdong cities. Local television
sometimes shows gruesome footage of people being dragged behind motorcyles when
they refuse to let go of purses grabbed by mobile thieves.
Criminals bent on making speedy getaways are also known for hacking off the
hands or arms of victims who hang on to their purses and bags.
Migrants outnumber native residents by several times in many cities in
Guangdong, causing a slew of social problems, but analysts also blame a widening
wealth gap for rampant crime.
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