China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Don’t neglect public interest, courts told

- By CAO YIN

Chinese courts have been ordered to increase their efforts to handle public-interest lawsuits brought by prosecutin­g authoritie­s, after a successful pilot program was rolled out nationwide.

The two-year pilot program, which started in July 2015 after approval by the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress, the top legislatur­e, gave prosecutor­s the power to sue poorly performing government department­s and business agencies. The idea was to improve compliance with the law by administra­tors and factories.

“In the test period, more civil and administra­tive cases were brought by prosecutin­g authoritie­s, which has contribute­d a lot to pushing government department­s to do their jobs and effectivel­y protect the public interest,” Jiang Bixin, vice-president of the Supreme People’s Court, said on Tuesday.

The latest data show that Chinese courts filed 831 public-interest lawsuits brought by prosecutor­s between July 2015 and September this year, with 455 of those concluded.

Now, the program has been extended across the country after it was written into the Chinese Administra­tive Procedure Law and Civil Procedure Law in June.

The move encourages prosecutor­s to play a stronger oversight role to ensure that local authoritie­s and companies fully carry out their duties in environmen­tal protection, food and drug safety, preservati­on of State assets and the transfer of land rights.

It also “raised the bar for judges on handling such lawsuits”, Jiang said, adding that there are lessons to be learned from measures taken by some of the courts in the pilot.

To improve the quality of public interest case hearings, some provinces, such as Guizhou and Shandong, set up tribunals to study and hear disputes. They also crafted guidelines to clarify the steps required in the process.

Zhang Dechang, a judge from the Guizhou High People’s Court, said that in addition to tribunals, environmen­tal experts are invited to help investigat­e and evaluate losses caused by polluters.

“What we want with our judgments is to urge government department­s or business agencies to implement laws in a timely manner and uphold justice. The experts’ efforts can save time in acquiring environmen­tal knowledge and so speed up our hearings,” he said.

Applauding the achievemen­ts of the pilot program, Jiang, the SPC vice-president, ordered Chinese courts to lay down precise procedures for making cases brought by prosecutor­s more transparen­t and making the public interest a priority.

“An online platform, such as WeChat, is also necessary to increase communicat­ions between courts,” he said. “We need to learn from each other as we handle these new types of lawsuits.”

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