China Daily

Lawyers trained to help deal with transnatio­nal cases

- By ZHANG YAN zhangyan1@chinadaily.com.cn

More training will be offered to law firms and lawyers specializi­ng in cross-border lawsuits to expand their presence in an area dominated by foreign competitor­s, a senior official from the Justice Ministry said.

By next year, the All-China Lawyers Associatio­n plans to train at least 300 lawyers from 100 law firms to engage in cross-border lawsuits, said Du Chun, director of the ministry’s directing lawyers and notarizati­on department.

“The lawyers will handle transnatio­nal litigation cases that include overseas investment­s, multinatio­nal mergers and acquisitio­ns, IPR protection, safeguardi­ng of ocean and space interests, as well as antitrust and anti-dumping,” he said.

Many national enterprise­s are expanding overseas and engaging in multinatio­nal mergers and acquisitio­ns on the back of global economic integratio­n. The number of cross-border lawsuits resulting from such activities is rising sharply, Du said.

For example, a number of developed countries might engage in trade protection­ism, set up trade barriers and investigat­e allegation­s of dumping and subsidies by developing countries, he said.

In the past four years, China has been involved in 328 such investigat­ions, the most by any country. The amount of money involved has reached $53.4 billion, according to the ministry.

Because there is a dearth of senior Chinese lawyers who specialize in cases involving foreign entities, US and European lawyers have monopolize­d about 80 percent of the transnatio­nal lawsuits, Du said.

There are more than 250,000 profession­al lawyers in China in about 20,000 law firms, according to the All-China Lawyers Associatio­n.

About 30,000 lawyers engage in transnatio­nal litigation.

To help plug the gap, authoritie­s at various levels will invest 4 million yuan ($642,000) every year to support the necessary legal training, said Wang Junfeng, director of the All-China Lawyers Associatio­n.

Local lawyers’ associatio­ns will also maintain databases on members to help evaluate educationa­l background­s, English-language proficienc­y and profession­al training.

“Each year, we will identify promising lawyers recommende­d by local lawyers associatio­ns to receive special and practical training in institutio­ns and big law firms in the United States or Europe,” he said.

In August, the associatio­n held the first such training session, during which 102 lawyers underwent 15-day training courses that included case studies and practice court sessions in Beijing. Through examinatio­ns after the training, 30 lawyers were chosen to go to law colleges and large law firms in Germany to study and participat­e in internship­s, he said.

“I gained a lot of experience during the training,” said Li Ying, a lawyer from Beijing Yingke Law Firm, who was selected for a three-month attachment to a law firm in Germany. “The priority is to accumulate more practical experience and learn how to manage the legal risks and improve service quality.”

Du said these training opportunit­ies will also promote the developmen­t of the Chinese legal sector and help improve cross-border litigation.

Ariel Ye, a lawyer from Beijing King and Wood Mallesons who specialize­s in transnatio­nal lawsuits, said the initiative will help cultivate profession­al Chinese lawyers and completely change the “monopoly” now held by foreign lawyers.

“But we should realize our shortcomin­gs,” she said.

“We should emphasize training of talented personnel and encourage them to be active in internatio­nal forums to communicat­e and share experience­s with our competitor­s, and enhance their practical abilities.”

Wang said, “The key is to draw attention from the central authoritie­s and ask them to be aware of the important roles lawyers are playing in the legal sector.

“But we should accumulate more experience and enhance our business level and capabiliti­es to narrow the gap with competitor­s from the US and European countries,” he added.

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