BEIJING — The top judicial and law enforcement bodies in China  have issued new guidelines that seek to halt the use of torture in  obtaining confessions or witness testimony, especially in death penalty  cases. 
 The rules, announced Sunday, would nullify evidence gathered through  violence or intimidation and give defendants the ability to challenge  confessions presented during their trials. 
 The new regulations were issued  weeks after the authorities conceded  that the confession used to erroneously convict a farmer for a murder  was based on torture. The case came to light only after the supposed  victim turned up alive and the defendant had spent 10 years in prison.  It has provoked national outrage. 
Read more at the New York Times 
 
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