China Daily (Hong Kong)

Power check

New rules aim to prevent officials from hindering cases against them

- By AN BAIJIE anbaijie@chinadaily.com.cn

People’s rights to sue government agencies and officials should be protected with more detailed rules, according to a draft amendment to be reviewed by the top legislatur­e.

The people’s right to sue government agencies and officials should be protected by the introducti­on of more detailed rules, according to a draft amendment to the Administra­tive Procedure Law.

The law, which defines procedures to challenge government agencies in court, is to be revised for the first time since it was enacted on Oct 1, 1990.

Xin Chunying, vice-chairwoman of the Legislativ­e Affairs Commission of the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress, said on Monday that many courts are reluctant to accept administra­tive lawsuits, and as a result, lots of people resort to petitions.

It has become an urgent need to revise the Administra­tive Procedure Law since it’s difficult for the people to have their administra­tive suits accepted by the court and tried fairly, she said.

The Standing Committee of the NPC, the top legislativ­e body, is scheduled to revise the draft during its bimonthly session that lasts from Monday to Saturday. The draft, with 99 rules, gives more detailed regulation­s than the current law, which has 75 rules.

Individual­s or organizati­ons who believe their rights of owning or using natural resources, including land, minerals, water, forestry, mountains and grassland, have been infringed by government agencies, can file suits, according to the draft.

The draft rules that courts should guarantee people’s rights to sue public power, and that government organs or individual­s are not allowed to hinder the exercise of judicial power.

If the people have difficulti­es in writing a lawsuit, they can bring an oral suit and the court must help them make a written record.

The court should make clear any reason for refusing a suit; and it should file a lawsuit within seven days after accepting a claim, according to the draft.

To prevent government agencies from intervenin­g in the trial process, the higher people’s court can designate a court in a place where the defendant or the plaintiff is not located, the draft says.

The draft also rules that if the people sue government agencies at county level and above, the case should be put under the jurisdicti­on of the intermedia­te people’s court, which is also aimed at preventing the government from interferin­g.

The members of the NPC Standing Committee heard the explanatio­n of the draft amendment on Monday, and they will review the draft on Wednesday.

Xin recommende­d that the draft amendment should add some regulation­s to urge the government agencies to perform their duties, such as reporting administra­tive bodies that refuse to carry out the court’s verdict on administra­tive lawsuits.

Jiang Bixin, vice-president of the Supreme People’s Court, said earlier this month that the Administra­tive Procedure Law should be revised to curb public power and promote efficiency in public administra­tion.

A systematic reform is needed to resolve the problems that affect the fairness of justice, Jiang told law professors at a seminar on Dec 6.

According to the decisions made last month at the Third Plenary Session of the 18th CPC Central Committee, the management of staff members and properties of courts and procurator­ates below the provincial level will be unified to ensure independen­ce and fairness in justice bodies.

The plenum, which set the blueprint of deepening reform, also pledged to separate the jurisdicti­ons of courts from administra­tive divisions.

Jiang Ming’an, a law professor at Peking University, said the amendment is expected to prevent the government from interferin­g with lawsuits against them since the cases might be handled by courts in other jurisdicti­ons.

It’s difficult currently for people to sue the government because the revision of the law has lagged behind, he said.

The Shenzhen Intermedia­te People’s Court heard 2,531 administra­tive cases last year, of which the government lost only 6.8 percent, according to a white book released on Nov 6.

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