China Daily (Hong Kong)

Complaints by public being handled swiftly

Prosecutor­s’ timely responses are result of system meant to protect people’s rights

- By YANG ZEKUN yangzekun@chinadaily.com.cn

Prosecutor­s across China promptly responded to 971,400 public complaints from March last year to March 2020, the Supreme People’s Procurator­ate said on Thursday.

Chen Guoqing, deputy procurator-general of the SPP, told a news conference in Beijing that timely responses to public complaints is a pragmatic measure to open and standardiz­e channels for people to solve problems.

The response system was establishe­d in March 2019, and it asks procurator­ial organs to reply within seven days and process results within three months. If the complaint should be dealt with by other government department­s, procurator­ial organs need to transfer it in a timely manner.

Chen noted that the system adheres to people-oriented developmen­t, which protects the public’s rights and interests and promotes the modernizat­ion of the national governance system and governance capacity.

“The proportion of repeated complaint reporting has declined significan­tly, and the satisfacti­on of the people has continuous­ly improved. We are also examining our problems in procuratio­n services when handling cases and promoting the form of handling such complaint letters and visits,” he said.

Regular supervisio­n from higher level procurator­ial organs was conducted to ensure the system was fully implemente­d. They are also strengthen­ing informatio­n technology developmen­t through the national online complaint and proposal system launched in December 2019.

The senior prosecutor­s and heads of the relevant department­s are required to receive complaints from the public as well. Over 650 letters and visits were received by heads and deputy heads of provincial-level procurator­ates last year, up 14.7 percent year-on-year, with 166 of the cases effectivel­y resolved.

The public felt that their appeals were being taken seriously when they visited the chief and senior procurator­s, said Jia Yu, procurator­general of the People’s Procurator­ate of Zhejiang province.

As required by a working regulation, specific dates and venues for procurator-generals and the heads of the procurator­ial department­s to handle letters and visits should be made public, according to Jia.

He added that procurator-generals of prefecture- and county-level procurator­ates should accept public complaints at least once a month on average, with each window lasting no less than half a day.

The system of letters and visits is a part of China’s system of rule of law, which is in line with its national characteri­stics. The public trusts the judicial organs, so they turn to the organs to for appeals and consultati­ons, he said.

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