This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find sources: "Capital offences in China" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR(September 2009) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Politics of China
Leadership
Leadership generations
Succession of power
Hu–Wen Administration (2002–2012)
Xi–Li Administration (2012–2017)
Xi Administration (since 2017)
4th Leadership Core: Xi Jinping
20th Party Politburo: Xi Jinping
14th State Council: Li Qiang
Current state leaders
Current provincial leaders
National leaders
Orders of precedence
Paramount leader: Xi Jinping
First lady: Peng Liyuan
Communist Party leader: Xi Jinping
State representative: Xi Jinping
Head of government: Li Qiang
Congress Chairman: Zhao Leji
Conference Chairman: Wang Huning
Commander-in-chief: Xi Jinping
Politburo Standing Committee longest-serving members
Related systems
Unified power
Democratic centralism
Collective leadership
Organization Department
Elections
Civil service
Constitution
Law
Constitution
Previous constitutions
1954
1975
1978
"People's democratic dictatorship" (Article 1)
Democratic centralism (Article 3)
Constitutional oath of office (Article 27)
Protection of human rights (Article 33)
Freedom of religion (Article 36)
Highest state organ of power (Article 57)
Chinese legal system
Civil law tradition
Socialist law tradition
Laws
Legislation Law
List of statutes
General Principles of the Civil Law (to 2020)
Civil Code (From 2021)
Marriage Law
Labour law
Labour Law
Labour Contract Law
Property law
Property Law
Intellectual property law
Patent law
Administrative law
Administrative Procedure Law
Criminal law
Capital punishment
Capital offences
Death sentence with reprieve
Communist Party
History
Principal leaders
Constitution & ideology
Admission Oath (Article 6)
Socialism with Chinese characteristics
Communism
Marxism–Leninism
Mao Zedong Thought
Deng Xiaoping Theory
Primary stage of socialism
Four Cardinal Principles
Three Represents
Scientific Outlook on Development
Harmonious Socialist Society
Xi Jinping Thought
Chinese Dream
Four Comprehensives
Two Establishes and Two Safeguards
Democracy
Organization
National Party Congress (20th)
Central Committee (20th)
General Secretary (list)
Xi Jinping
Central Politburo (20th)
Standing Committee (20th)
Central Secretariat (20th)
Central Military Commission
Chairman: Xi Jinping
Vice Chairmen:
Zhang Youxia, He Weidong
National Security Commission
Chairman: Xi Jinping
Vice-Chairman:
Li Qiang, Zhao Leji, Cai Qi
Office Chief: Cai Qi
Comprehensively Deepening Reforms Commission
Director: Xi Jinping
Deputy Directors:
Li Qiang, Wang Huning, Cai Qi
Secretary-General: Wang Huning
Financial & Economic Affairs Commission
Director: Xi Jinping
Deputy Director: Li Qiang
Office Chief: He Lifeng
General Office
Director: Cai Qi
Office of the General Secretary
Chief: Cai Qi
Central Guard Bureau
Central Guard Unit
Office of the Central Secrecy Commission
Organization Department
Head: Li Ganjie
Central Commission for Discipline Inspection (20th)
Standing Committee (20th)
Secretary: Li Xi
Commission for Discipline Inspection of the Central Military Commission
State Administration for Sci., Tech. & Industry for National Defense
Military history
Armed conflicts
Military modernization
Military reform since 2015
CMC Leading Group for Military Reform
Leader: Xi Jinping
Supervisory organ
National Supervisory Commission
Director: Liu Jinguo
Corruption in China
Anti-corruption campaign since 2012
Independent Commission Against Corruption (Hong Kong)
Commission Against Corruption (Macau)
Judicial organs
Supreme People's Court
President: Zhang Jun
People's Courts Judicial Police
Supreme People's Procuratorate
Prosecutor General: Ying Yong
People's Procuratorates Judicial Police
Judiciary of Hong Kong
Court of Final Appeal
Department of Justice
Prosecutions Division
Law enforcement in Hong Kong
Security Bureau
Regular Disciplined Services
Hong Kong Police Force
Judiciary of Macau
Court of Final Appeal
Public Prosecutions Office
Secretariat for Security
Macau Security Force
Unitary Police Services [zh]
Public Security Police
Judiciary Police [zh]
United front
Political Consultative Conference
National Committee
Chairman: Wang Huning
Vice-Chairpersons
Top-ranked: Shi Taifeng
Secretary-General: Wang Dongfeng
Political parties:
CCP (ruling)
United Front Work Department
Head: Shi Taifeng
RCCK
CDL
CNDCA
CAPD
CPWDP
CZGP
JS
TDSL
Historical parties:
KMT
CDSP
YCP
Federation of Industry and Commerce
People's organizations
Law enforcement
CCP Central Politics and Law Commission
Secretary: Chen Wenqing
Ministry of Public Security
Minister: Wang Xiaohong
Public Security Organs People's Police
State Immigration Administration
Local public security bureaus
Ministry of State Security
Minister: Chen Yixin
State Security Organs People's Police
Ministry of Justice
Minister: He Rong
Judicial Administrative Organs People's Police
Bureau of Prison Administration [zh]
Office for Safeguarding National Security
Urban Management (chengguan)
Propaganda
Central Leading Group for Propaganda, Ideology and Culture
Leader: Cai Qi
Deputy Leaders: Li Shulei, Shen Yiqin
Central Guidance Commission on Building Spiritual Civilization
Director: Cai Qi
Deputy Director: Li Shulei
Central Propaganda Department
Head: Li Shulei
National Press and Publication Administration
China Film Administration
State Council Information Office
China Daily
Ministry of Culture and Tourism
National Radio and Television Administration
China Media Group
China Central Television
China Global Television Network
China National Radio
China Radio International
Xinhua News Agency
Reference News
China News Service
People's Daily
Global Times
China Today
Censorship in China
Radio jamming
Overseas censorship of Chinese issues
Media of China
Internal media
Publishing industry in China
Internet in China
Internet censorship
Great Firewall
Great Cannon
Central Cyberspace Affairs Commission
Director: Cai Qi
Cyberspace Administration of China
Director: Zhuang Rongwen
Hong Kong
Macau
Central Leading Group on Hong Kong and Macau Affairs
Leader: Ding Xuexiang
HK & Macau Affairs Office
Director: Xia Baolong
Hong Kong Liaison Office
Macau Liaison Office
One country, two systems
Special administrative regions
Hong Kong Basic Law
Chief Executive: John Lee Ka-chiu
Hong Kong SAR Government
Politics of Hong Kong
Pro-Beijing camp
Pro-democracy camp
Independence movement
Mainland & HK CEPA
Macao Basic Law
Chief Executive: Ho Iat-seng
Macau SAR Government
Politics of Macau
Mainland & Macau CEPA
Cross-Strait relations
Cross-Strait relations
Chinese Civil War
One China
Political status of Taiwan
Republic of China on Taiwan
Taiwan Area
"Taiwan Province", PRC
Taiwan independence movement
Anti-Secession Law
Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement
Cross-Strait Service Trade Agreement
Chinese unification
Central Leading Group for Taiwan Affairs
Leader: Xi Jinping
Deputy Leader: Wang Huning
Taiwan Affairs Office
Director: Song Tao
Association for Relations Across the Taiwan Straits
Foreign relations
Central Foreign Affairs Commission
Director: Xi Jinping
Deputy Director: Li Qiang
Secretary-General: Wang Yi
Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Minister: Wang Yi
Spokespersons
Diplomatic missions
Diplomatic missions of China / in China
Foreign aid from China / to China
International Development Cooperation Agency
Ministry of Commerce
Exim Bank of China
China Development Bank
Belt and Road Initiative
Silk Road Fund
Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank
BRICS
New Development Bank
Ministry of National Defense
International Military Cooperation Office
NPC Foreign Affairs Committee
CCP International Department
State Administration of Foreign Experts Affairs
Overseas Chinese Affairs Office
Chinese nationality law
Chinese passports (Hong Kong; Macau)
Visa requirements for Chinese citizens (Hong Kong, Macau)
Visa policy of China (Hong Kong; Macau)
National Immigration Administration
Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistence
Panda diplomacy
Beijing Consensus
Community of Common Destiny
China and the United Nations
China and the World Trade Organization
Shanghai Cooperation Organisation
China–Africa relations
China–Arab relations
China–Caribbean relations
China–European Union relations
China–Latin America relations
China–Pacific relations
China–Russia relations
China–United States relations
Related topics
Administrative divisions
Hukou system
Family planning
Ethnic minorities
China portal
Other countries
v
t
e
In Mainland China, there are 46[1] crimes punishable by death.[2][3] These are defined in the criminal law of China, which comprehensively identifies criminal acts and their corresponding liabilities.[4]
^"China media: Death penalty". BBC News. 2014-10-28. Archived from the original on 2018-01-03. Retrieved 2018-01-04.
^"China says death penalty to be used only for 'serious offenders'". Asahi Shimbun. The Associated Press. 2016-09-12. Archived from the original on 2018-01-03. Retrieved 2018-01-04.
^立行, ed. (2015-08-29). "中国刑法再次修正取消9个死刑罪名". BBC中文网 (BBC Chinese) (in Simplified Chinese). Archived from the original on 2018-01-03. Retrieved 2018-01-04.
^Wang, Nathan; Madison, Nathan (2013). Inside China's Legal System. Oxford: Chandos Publishing. p. 311. ISBN 9780857094605.
and 27 Related for: Capital offences in China information
In Mainland China, there are 46 crimes punishable by death. These are defined in the criminal law of China, which comprehensively identifies criminal acts...
punishable by death in some countries include: Firearm offences (eg. Arms Offences Act of Singapore) Terrorism Treason (a capital crime in most countries that...
state, diplomat, or government member; or in the course or furtherance of certain offences under the Offences against the State Act 1939: Usurpation of...
for drug offences worldwide. For 2022 HRI reports at least 285 executions by law for drug offences globally in 6 countries. 252+ in Iran. 22 in Saudi Arabia...
Capital punishment is a legal penalty inChina. It is applicable to offenses ranging from murder to drug trafficking. Executions are carried out by lethal...
Bai Enpei. CapitaloffencesinChina Death recorded Reprieve "Gazette of the State Council of the People's Republic of China" (PDF) (inChinese). No. 10...
abolition of capital punishment in Michigan across the river from Windsor. After Confederation, a revision of the statutes reduced the number of offences punishable...
the judicial system of China was often used for political persecution of rivals, and penalties such as jail terms or capital punishment were largely...
offences; in 1999, it abolished it for military offences. In 2005, Mexico abolished the death penalty; in 2009 Argentina abolished it. China is the world's...
regarding offences within the country. None of the articles present in the criminal code allow for the capital punishment as penalty for an offence. The Portuguese...
Capital punishment is a legal penalty in Taiwan. The long list of capitaloffences, for which the death penalty can be imposed, includes murder, treason...
dehumanisation, at times aimed at attempting to deter the commission of offences. Capital punishment in Judaism "North Korea dictator Kim Jong Un's executions: anti-aircraft...
during a scheduled offence can likewise be hanged. Trafficking in arms (Section 6) is a capitaloffencein Singapore. Under the Arms Offences Act, trafficking...
Religion inChina is diverse and most Chinese people are either non-religious or practice a combination of Buddhism and Taoism with a Confucian worldview...
was born in Singapore in 1984. Mohamed Shalleh began to consume drugs at age 14. He also went to prison for drug-related offences at one point in 2008, and...
violation of rights to life by Singapore for legalizing capital punishment for drug offences. Despite the plea, Mohd Aziz (whose clemency plea was rejected)...
method for adultery committed by married men and women is stoning (see Capitaloffences). If the conviction was established through confession, a retraction...
the Crown Colony of Hong Kong for offences such as murder, kidnapping ending in death, and piracy. The last execution in Hong Kong was carried out on 16...
Censorship in the People's Republic of China is mandated by the PRC's ruling party, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). It is one of the strictest censorship...
judges and other offences. In rebuttal to the condemnation by the UN Human Rights Office (which likewise called for the abolition of capital punishment and...
"General Principles" section a description of the offences known as the "Ten Abominations". These offences were regarded as the most abhorrent. As the official...
inChina are the non-Han population in the People's Republic of China (PRC). The PRC officially recognizes 55 ethnic minority groups within Chinain addition...
2016-05-15. "QR&O: Volume II – Division 2 - Service Offences and Courts Martial - Chapter 103 – Service Offences:National Defence". Department of National Defence...
God, and are considered the most serious offences under sharia law, for which punishments are prescribed in the Quran. This includes banditry and adultery:...
First Digital China Summit, which was held at the Fuzhou Strait International Conference and Exhibition Centre in Fuzhou, the capital of Fujian Province...
in the country itself. Capital punishment for drug trafficking Capital punishment in Singapore "贩毒者死! 5毒贩今早问吊 3香港人 1尼日利亚人 1本地人". Shin Min Daily (in Chinese)...
murder, but China retains in law a number of nonviolent death penalty offences such as drug trafficking. The People's Republic of China administers more...