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Human rights in China
ChinaPolitics

Chinese legal experts warn detention measure is being abused and call for change

  • They say RSDL, a harsh form of detention often used in terrorism cases, can lead to human rights violations and false convictions

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Suspects under residential surveillance at a designated location, or RSDL, are usually under police watch 24 hours a day, according to a Chinese law professor. Photo: Kyodo
Phoebe Zhangin Shenzhen
Chinese legal experts are calling for changes to laws governing a form of detention they say has been abused by authorities, who often use torture to extract information from suspects.

The measure, known as residential surveillance at a designated location (RSDL), was originally intended as a form of mild restriction of personal freedoms for people suspected of less serious violations.

Decades later, it has become the harshest form of detention used in state security cases, including terrorism.
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Now legal professionals say the criminal procedure law, which is expected to undergo revisions in the coming years, should be changed to abolish or modify how RSDL is used to avoid abuse, human rights violations and false convictions.

In April, the story of Beijing tech company manager Xing Yanjun went viral. He had died after being taken by the police and subjected to RSDL – under which suspects are confined in a designated location and put under constant surveillance.

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Xing’s older brother, author of the viral post on Weibo, wrote that police told the family his brother had hung himself, but they refused to believe it and sought the truth.

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