The report says that police have found ways around the rules by torturing detainees outside of official detention facilities, using methods that leave no visible injuries and taping confessions later.
China's legal system still relies heavily on confessions to produce convictions in nearly every case, partly because of often inadequate manpower to properly investigate crimes.
Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying told reporters today that Chinese law prohibits torture during interrogations and anyone found responsible would be punished. "China is now stepping up efforts to improve the guarantee of human rights in the legal system ... So the public sees fairness and justice in each case," she told reporters.
Last year, a teenager from Inner Mongolia who was convicted of rape and murder and executed 18 years ago was exonerated posthumously. The police officer who oversaw the original case has been charged with using torture to coerce a confession.
Measures put into place before Xi became president require interrogations to be videotaped and ban the use of evidence directly obtained through torture. Those are positive steps, but not enough, Human Rights Watch said.
"The confession is still highly valued, a confession is obtained in almost every case; there is nothing that really holds a police officer accountable for torture or coercion," said Maya Wang, Hong Kong-based Asia researcher at Human Rights Watch.
In the report, former detainees, mostly suspected of theft, selling drugs or robbery, described abuse during police interrogations, including sleep deprivation, being beaten with batons and being hung up by the wrists.
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