China Daily

Lawyers get cross-border training for foreign cases

Ministry of Justice preps crack legal team to tackle internatio­nal disputes

- By ZHANG YAN zhangyan1@chinadaily.com.cn

China will cultivate 1,000 senior lawyers specializi­ng in cross-border lawsuits to better serve enterprise­s and citizens, a senior official from the Ministry of Justice said.

Since last year, the All China Lawyers Associatio­n, a division of the Justice Ministry, has offered special training to 1,000 legal profession­als from across the country, an effort that will continue through 2022, said Zhou Yuansheng, director from the Lawyers and Public Notary Department, in an interview with China Daily.

Those lawyers will focus on tackling transnatio­nal litigation involving overseas investment­s, multinatio­nal mergers and acquisitio­ns, IPR protection, environmen­tal protection and internatio­nal commercial arbitratio­n, as well as anti-dumping or antitrust cases, he said.

The ministry has applied for 4 million yuan ($607,000) of public financing to support the legal training each year, Zhou said.

“It’s more than necessary to cultivate a profession­al squad of lawyers to specialize in cases involving overseas businesses aimed at safeguardi­ng the legitimate rights of the involved enterprise­s and citizens,” he said.

In recent years, a large number of State-owned companies have expanded overseas and engaged in multinatio­nal mergers and acquisitio­ns against a backdrop of growing global economic integratio­n, leading to a growing number of crossborde­r legal disputes.

A typical case occurred in November 2016, when internatio­nal arbitratio­n ruled that a company in Dubai would compensate a Chinese engineerin­g company over a project payment and losses valued at 160 million yuan. The Dubai company was also ordered to pay 80 percent of the company’s lawyer fees.

Zhou said the ministry will set up a database of talented lawyers who are skilled in handling cross-border lawsuits, based on their educationa­l background, proficienc­y in English and internatio­nal laws or profession­al experience.

Since last year and through 2022, the ACLA plans to organize promising lawyers nationwide each year to attend a 15-day special training in Beijing. During the training, judicial officers, legal experts and senior lawyers will give them lectures about internatio­nal laws and analysis of typical cases.

Then, some of the outstandin­g lawyers will be rec- ommended by the associatio­n to big law firms, famous universiti­es or legal institutes overseas for further training, he said.

Between Oct 15 and Nov 18, 20 talented lawyers were sent to the US Internatio­nal Law Institute and some law firms for a 35-day training program concerning overseas investment and internatio­nal trade policy, the ministry said.

In addition, 20 others had a chance to attend BPP University in London to study Internatio­nal commercial arbitratio­n.

“The training has broadened my view and helped me to gain a lot of practical experience,” said Mo Haibo, a partner at King and Wood Mallesons in Beijing who went for the UK to train.

Between its launch in 2012 and 2017, the Ministry of Justice and lawyers associatio­n offered training to 300 talented personnel nationwide, and many went to the United States, the United Kingdom, Spain or Germany for study or exchanges.

 ??  ?? Zhou Yuansheng
Zhou Yuansheng

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong