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    Default Interviews Before Execution via China TV

    Just thought to share this interesting interviews.

    Quote China and the United States are both among the countries that execute the most prisoners annually—but only one of them has ever had a TV talk show dedicated to presenting the death row inmates in a personal way. (According to Amnesty International, China executes the most people by more than an order of magnitude over its #2 competition, Pakistan. The United States is #6 on the list.)

    From 2006 to 2012, the Henan Legal Channel in China’s landlocked Henan province ran a weekly TV show called Interviews Before Execution, with an appealing host named Ding Yu, who became something of a star because of the show. She has interviewed more than 200 inmates on the show. In March 2012, BBC Two, on its This World series, aired an hour-long documentary on Interviews Before Execution; with its typical light touch, the Chinese authorities, fearful of embarrassment in the international arena, quickly moved to cancel the show.

    In China, citizens can be executed for any one 55 offenses, including endagering public security and “economic crimes” such as embezzlement, but Interviews Before Execution focuses almost entirely on brutal murder cases. Most of the prisoners are glumly contrite, resigned to their fate, inarticulate about the motives that led to the crimes. Providing an instructive snapshot into China’s sexual mores was Ding Yu’s extended interview with Bao Rongting, a homosexual man who was convicted of murdering his mother. In China, homosexuality was a criminal offense as late as 1999. The Bao Rongting episodes of Interviews Before Execution were a huge ratings success. Since 2007 a new safeguard has been introduced: all capital cases must be sent to the Supreme Court for review—it does happen that they occasionally return cases to the lower courts for further investigation.

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    Default Re: Interviews Before Execution via China TV

    In Canada we don't have the death penalty, unless of course you include marriage. But marriage is more voluntary so I guess that doesn't count.

    During time when there are heinous crimes in the public eye, we often hear a cry out among the masses for the "death penalty to be brought back into our legal system.

    Myself, I am glad that Canada does not kill people.

    However on the flip side, if I ever was to be convicted of a crime, and I knew I was going to be put to death, I might actually like and enjoy it.
    It would remind me each and every second that I have left before I leave this world just how precious each moment we exist here is.
    Something that a non-condemned man takes for granted.

    Then again, I know there is no real death.

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