China Daily (Hong Kong)

Fund to be created for restoring environmen­t

- By CAO YIN caoyin@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s top court said it plans to help build a national fund for environmen­tal restoratio­n with other authoritie­s this year to fight pollution and implement suggestion­s from top legislativ­e and political advisers.

As punishment­s against polluters have increased in recent years, the Supreme People’s Court has also received advice from deputies to the National People’s Congress on building the fund, according to Wang Xuguang, chief judge of the top court’s environmen­tal division.

“The advice called for us to ensure that the money confiscate­d in pollution-related cases is used for environmen­tal restoratio­n,” Wang said, adding that the top court accepted the suggestion and decided to implement it as a priority this year.

He said the top court would speed up coordinati­on with other government department­s, such as those concerned with finance and environmen­tal protection — together with prosecutin­g authoritie­s — to establish the fund this year.

“But we need to work with the department­s to clarify who is qualified to use the fund, how to use it and who should monitor its use,” he said, adding that such a big national project demands more research.

One of the deputies who proposed the fund, Guo Jun from Fujian province, visited the top court recently to express her satisfacti­on with the court’s determinat­ion to push ahead with the fund.

“Courts are responsibl­e for handing down verdicts, or ordering defendants to pay money to repair the polluted environmen­t, but they are not good at restoratio­n,” said Guo, who is also a water pollution prevention specialist.

“If the compensati­on for restoratio­n is large, it must be used by profession­als in accordance with a plan,” she said. “Also, a court doesn’t know, for example, what trees should be planted or how to plant in a polluted area.”

Therefore, building a fund and regulating its use is necessary, as it can make better use of the money and help alleviate pollution, she said.

In recent years, heeding suggestion­s from political advisers, the top court has levied heavier punishment­s against officials who ignored pollution or abused power in matters of environmen­tal protection.

Lyu Zhongmei, who has given advice as a member of the National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference, welcomed the progress made by the top court and said she hoped courts nationwide will pay more efforts to protect the ecology along the Yangtze River.

Wang, the chief environmen­tal judge, said the court would work with the NPC Standing Committee, the top legislatur­e, to draft a law on the Yangtze region’s environmen­tal protection this year.

Last year, Chinese courts filed 26,481 criminal environmen­tal cases, up 16.5 percent year-onyear, the top court said, adding that disputes over illegal mining also increased rapidly.

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