China Daily

Laws to better deal with health emergencie­s

- By CAO YIN in Beijing and ZHAO RUIXUE in Jinan Contact the writers at caoyin@chinadaily.com.cn

China will increase its efforts in making and amending public health laws this year to further improve people’s safety and provide them with high-quality lives, China’s top legislatur­e said last month.

Based on last year’s legal achievemen­ts in pandemic control, the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress has decided to accelerate its public-health-related legislativ­e pace in 2021 to continuous­ly fight the ongoing outbreak and effectivel­y prevent health risks.

“We plan to revise the Infectious Disease Prevention Law and the Frontier Health and Quarantine Law, and we are also considerin­g drafting a law to help the nation better deal with public health emergencie­s,” Yue Zhongming, spokesman for the NPC Standing Committee’s Legislativ­e Affairs Commission, said in early February.

“The safety of people’s lives will always be the top priority in making and revising laws, and our aim is to ensure that people can have highqualit­y lives and to promote their sense of fulfillmen­t, happiness and security by legislatio­n,” he added.

In 2020, Li Zongsheng, an NPC deputy and lawyer from Liaoning province, attended several legislativ­e activities relating to public health and shared his views with the public.

“All the measures contribute­d, in my opinion, to helping alleviate public concerns at the critical moment in the epidemic prevention and to building a legal system in the public health sector,” Li said.

In late February last year, as COVID-19 flared in China, the top legislatur­e promptly passed a measure to comprehens­ively ban the wildlife trade and unhealthy practice of consuming wild animals.

In April, the NPC approved a legislativ­e work plan on promoting public health that would resolve shortages in the health sector and problems exposed during the outbreak.

It was the first time the top legislatur­e created a work plan for a special sector, and it accelerate­d the building of a legal system on public health in China.

Sun Jianbo, an NPC deputy from Shandong province, also shared his ideas of promoting public health through legislatio­n last year.

As the legislatur­e approved of the decision on illegal consumptio­n of wildlife, Sun suggested it amend the Wildlife Protection Law to update in a timely manner or further clarify which animals must be safeguarde­d, “because the rule of law is a good remedy that can protect both wild animals and people’s lives,” he said.

However, as some wildlife farmers could be affected by the ban, he also called on the top legislatur­e to make policies to assist them in transformi­ng their businesses and prevent them from suffering economic losses.

Key issues

Sun is preparing to travel to Beijing to attend the upcoming annual session of the 13th NPC, which has been scheduled to open on March 5. He said he will continue following public health-related issues, especially those on farming developmen­t amid the COVID-19 outbreak.

“These issues are not only close to people’s lives, but also related to improving village revitaliza­tion and high-quality developmen­t,” he said.

According to the work plan unveiled in April, the top legislatur­e will make and revise 17 laws in the health-related sector. So far, six have been finished, including the amendment to the Animal Epidemic Prevention Law, which was passed in January and will take effect in May.

In addition, the NPC’s Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs Committee earlier released that preparator­y work for amending laws on livestock and entry-exit quarantine of animals and plants has also been underway.

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