China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Local officials must be made aware healthy environmen­t is a priority

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JIANGSU PROVINCIAL HIGH PEOPLE’S COURT issued its first white paper on environmen­tal protection cases heard in courts in the province on Tuesday, World Environmen­t Day. According to the white paper, courts in Jiangsu accepted 1,880 cases related to the environmen­t from 2014 to 2016, and, most notably, 13 officials were found guilty for their involvemen­t in environmen­tal crimes. Legal Daily comments:

A closer look at the officials reveals something interestin­g. In 2014, two officials were found guilty and sentenced to imprisonme­nt for environmen­tal crimes; the number rose to three in 2015 and to eight in 2016.

That shows at least two trends: First, certain officials are guilty of not doing their duty to protect the environmen­t; second, the judiciary is determined to fight such crimes.

Most of the 13 officials were found guilty of failing in their duties or trying to cover up the crimes of others. Their mode of illegality was similar: When receiving complaints from the public about certain enterprise­s polluting the environmen­t, they ignored the complaints, or even helped the enterprise­s evade their due punishment­s. Some did so because they received bribes from the polluting enterprise­s, while some bent the law for the polluters because curbing pollution might harm the local economic growth and dim their hopes of promotion.

In both cases, it is the local residents that suffer from their actions. The problem is, the officials that failed in their duties or abused their power seldom received judicial penalty. That only 13 officials were found guilty of any wrongdoing is a small number compared to the total number of pollution cases heard by the courts in Jiangsu. Quite a number of officials have gone unpunished despite their failure to fulfill their duty of protecting the environmen­t.

It is time to change this. The environmen­t cannot possibly be protected unless the responsibl­e officials perform their duties as they should. In order to realize this, it is necessary to regulate the officials and let them receive their deserved penalties when they are involved in illegal activities.

More important, as has been called for many times, the way leading lower-level officials are evaluated needs to be changed so they do not pursue GDP growth at all costs. The environmen­t should be included in the performanc­e evaluation system for officials, which will encourage leading local officials to better perform their environmen­tal protection duties.

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