What is a violation of the right to life?

Violations of citizens' right to life and health take many forms, including criminal acts: intentional homicide, intentional injury, robbery, kidnapping, rape, indecency and detention. There are also illegal acts that do not constitute a crime but violate public security management: beating, restricting personal freedom, illegally searching the body, and so on; There are also common civil torts: traffic accidents cause injuries to others, injuries on buses, being trapped in elevators and so on.

In criminal law and public security administration punishment law, violation of personal rights is regarded as an independent part of illegal rules, which is different from endangering public safety and infringing property rights.

1, violence

It is a serious violation of citizens' personal rights to cause physical injury or death to citizens by violent means such as beating or instigating others to do so.

2, illegal use of weapons, police equipment, police equipment

Refers to guns, batons, police ropes, handcuffs, etc.

3. Other illegal acts that cause bodily injury or death to citizens.

This is a general principle of the State Compensation Law, which refers to the acts committed by administrative organs and their staff that cause damage to citizens' right to life and health in addition to the acts listed in Article 3 of the State Compensation Law.

Violation of the right to life means death. If a citizen dies, he shall pay death compensation, funeral expenses and living expenses. The state pays death compensation and funeral expenses to the families of deceased citizens, and the total amount of death compensation and funeral expenses shall not exceed 20 times of the average annual salary of employees in the previous year; Living expenses should be paid to the people who were supported by the deceased before his death, so as to ensure the basic material conditions necessary for the survival of relatives who had legal support obligations before his death.

Legal basis: Article 110 of the Civil Law of People's Republic of China (PRC) stipulates that natural persons have the right to life, body, health, name, portrait, reputation, honor, privacy and marital autonomy.