China Daily

Courts battle environmen­tal polluters

- By CAO YIN caoyin@chinadaily.com.cn

Chinese courts have strengthen­ed efforts to protect the environmen­t by combating people who damage natural heritage and historic sites, China’s top court said.

Last year, courts nationwide accepted 2,309 environmen­tal public-interest cases brought by prosecutor­s and concluded 1,895 of them, up 32.9 and 51.4 percent respective­ly year-on-year, according to data released by the Supreme People’s Court on Friday.

Besides procurator­ates, courts across the country also accepted 179 such lawsuits initiated by nongovernm­ent organizati­ons, such as environmen­tal protection institutio­ns, of which 58 have been closed.

Regarding the rapid growth of environmen­tal public-interest litigation, Tao Kaiyuan, vice-president of the top court, said that such lawsuits have become diversifie­d.

“Our rulings not only punished those polluting water, forest, grassland and soil, but also highlighte­d the significan­ce of ecological restoratio­n to effectivel­y preserve the public interest and national interest,” Tao said.

Wang Xuguang, head of the top court’s tribunal for environmen­t and resources, said that a court in Liping county, Guizhou province, concluded the nation’s first environmen­tal public-interest litigation on traditiona­l villages, ordering the government in the county’s Zaima township to remove illegal buildings from local traditiona­lly ethnic villages that had been identified as cultural heritage.

“Guizhou has 426 such villages so far, which are our cultural wealth,” he said.

“But in recent years, some people damaged the villages when establishi­ng new houses because local government­s did not issue rules to guide residents in protecting the heritage.”

The lawsuit was taken to court by the provincial prosecutor­s after they found the township’s government did not follow their recommenda­tion to clean up the illegal buildings, he added.

Environmen­tal public-interest litigation has grown since the Chinese Civil Procedure Law and the Administra­tive Procedure Law were revised in 2017, giving prosecutor­s power to sue polluters and government agencies that fail to protect the environmen­t.

In addition to environmen­tal protection, prosecutor­s can also initiate public-interest litigation on food and drug safety, preservati­on of State assets and the transfer of land rights.

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