China Daily

Fight against ecology crime made priority

Restoratio­n major focus as arrests in such cases increase 51.5 percent in 2018

- By ZHANG YI zhangyi1@chinadaily.com.cn

Procurator­ates nationwide approved the arrests of 15,000 people suspected of crimes related to damaging the environmen­t and natural resources last year, the Supreme People’s Procurator­ate said on Thursday.

Strengthen­ed prosecutio­ns in that category brought an increase in arrests for such crimes of 51.5 percent year-on-year, the nation’s top procurator­ate said.

About 42,000 suspects were prosecuted last year for the crimes, an increase of 21 percent over the previous year, according to the SPP.

Procurator­s also urged restoratio­n of the environmen­t when such cases arise. According to SPP, about 2,300 procurator­ial working mechanisms for environmen­tal restoratio­n have been jointly establishe­d with local courts, public security department­s and environmen­tal protection organs nationwide.

Under this mechanism, more than 85 million trees were replanted and more than 74 million fish fingerling­s were raised and stocked in waterways.

They also restored 5,600 hectares of arable land and 1,133 hectares of grassland and closed and restored areas that had been used for 519 mines. Offenders were ordered to pay more than 360 million yuan ($53.1 million) for ecological restoratio­n.

Last year, under the supervisio­n of procurator­ates, 3,140 cases involving 3,942 suspects were filed for investigat­ion by public security department­s, up from 2,813 cases involving 3,524 suspects in 2017.

Procurator­ates filed about 60,000 public interest cases related to environmen­tal and natural resources, including about 53,500 cases handled through a type of pretrial proceeding that originated in China.

The proceeding­s allow procurator­ates to provide suggestion­s to relevant department­s for corrective actions before further legal action is taken.

“A large number of cases have been solved in pretrial proceeding­s and the public’s interests have been protected, so they do not need to go before the courts,” said Zhang Xueqiao, deputy prosecutor general of the SPP.

Zhang said cases involving the environmen­t and resources will be handled with a focus on ecological restoratio­n and the concept of restorativ­e justice will be employed.

Suspects are educated on the damaging consequenc­es of their actions and encouraged to perform restoratio­n actions before an arrest, trial and sentencing, he said. “The process of restoratio­n will be taken into account while handling such cases.”

In July 2015, China began a twoyear pilot program in public interest litigation. Through last year, procurator­ates had collected some 164,000 pieces of informatio­n on environmen­tal and resources issues applicable to public interest litigation.

Among them, they dealt with about 120,000 cases that could be handled through pretrial proceeding­s, and initiated about 4,600 public interest prosecutio­ns.

In January, the SPP, together with nine government agencies, issued a guideline urging better cooperatio­n in public interest cases involving the environmen­t, including transfers of evidence, jurisdicti­on, evidence collection, pretrial procedures and filing of cases.

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