Waubonsee Community College

Justice, Japan style, produced by Ian Altschwager for Australian Broadcasting Corporation

Label
Justice, Japan style, produced by Ian Altschwager for Australian Broadcasting Corporation
Language
eng
Characteristic
videorecording
Intended audience
For College; Adult audiences
Main title
Justice
Medium
electronic resource
Oclc number
747797873
Responsibility statement
produced by Ian Altschwager for Australian Broadcasting Corporation
Runtime
25
Sub title
Japan style
Summary
Almost every person charged with committing a serious crime in Japan is convicted and goes to jail. Jury trials simply do not exist and convictions are based on confessions. Some believe that Japanese criminal court cases are simply ceremonies to impose punishment rather than determine guilt. The filmmaker obtained rare access to Japan's jails, where a cruel, secret system allows the abuse, torture and death of inmates. Prisons have spartan conditions and extremely strict rules; prisoners can be kept in solitary confinement for decades, others live eight to a room. In the last ten years there have been close to 250 suspicious deaths in custody. The film recounts the tragic ordeal of Sakae Menda who spent thirty-four years on death row after he confessed to a crime he did not commit, a confession obtained following six days of sleep deprivation and beatings. His testimony is powerful evidence of the flaws in Japan's justice system where reform is unlikely and Western notions of human rights are relatively new
Target audience
general
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