China Daily (Hong Kong)

Litigation in public interests encouraged

- THE GUANGDONG PROVINCIAL CONSUMERS’ ASSOCIATIO­N

in South China has filed the country’s first public interest lawsuit for consumers requesting compensati­on. It is seeking more than 10 million yuan ($1.44 million) from 20 defendants who sold substandar­d pork products to customers. Southern Metropolis Daily commented on Tuesday:

Guangdong’s public interest lawsuit marks a praisewort­hy attempt to keep individual offenders and businesses in check.

Up until 2013 when the Law on the Protection of Consumer Rights and Interests was revised, only individual­s and corporatio­ns whose interests were directly involved could resort to litigation. Since the revision, judicial organs of the country have cleared obstacles for the consumers’ associatio­ns to file public interest lawsuits.

Against the backdrop of increasing pollution and food safety offenses, such efforts are called for to add legal support to curb such harmful practices. It is reported that the fourth quarter of last year witnessed a spike in the number of public interest lawsuits in such aspects as environmen­tal protection, highlighti­ng that litigation is becoming more popular as a way to better protect the

interests of the general public.

It is worth all the efforts, because local administra­tive organs will feel a stronger urge to shoulder their due responsibi­lities and correct their wrongdoing­s in the face of public interest lawsuits.

Two years ago, prosecutor­s in Qingliu county, East China’s Fujian province, filed a public interest lawsuit against the local environmen­tal protection bureau, which eventually performed its duty to take care of electronic waste after rounds of delay.

More such cases are welcome to protect the public’s interests. The power of law should follow citizens, as the shadow follows the body. In order to protect the public interest litigation system and make it more fit for its purpose, the judicial system must be developed so it is more conducive to citizens’ participat­ion.

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