China Daily

Li stresses financial aid for small businesses

Legal experts say education, guidance necessary to prevent delinquenc­y

- By XU WEI xuwei@chinadaily.com.cn

Premier Li Keqiang reiterated on Monday pledges to channel increased fiscal funds via the raising of fiscal deficits and issuance of government bonds directly to smaller businesses, self-employed individual­s and low-income groups to help them ride out the COVID-19 pandemic.

Li spoke in Qingdao, Shandong province, at a symposium through video link with officials from provincial, city and countyleve­l authoritie­s and business leaders.

The premier noted that this year’s Government Work Report included measures to raise budget deficits and issue special government bonds for COVID-19 control.

The move, which could increase fiscal funds by 2 trillion yuan ($280.2 billion), is an important step to alleviate businesses’ difficulti­es and stimulate market vitality, he said.

The increased fiscal funds will be mainly used for creating jobs, ensuring people’s basic living standards and protecting market players, he said.

As part of special policies adopted at special times, the funds will be directly channeled to primary-level units at city and county levels in order to benefit businesses and the people, he said.

He called it an innovative measure in macro regulation in that it gives more priority to helping businesses and leveraging the strength of market players in stabilizin­g economic fundamenta­ls.

The number of crimes committed by minors has rebounded in the last two years, and the number of crimes against minors is also increasing, according to a white book released by the Supreme People’s Procurator­ate on Monday.

The white book reviewed judicial protection work of minors from 2014 to 2019.

It showed that while the number of minors involved in serious violent crimes, drug crimes, school bullying and crimes committed by minors between the ages of 14 to 16 had been gradually decreasing, the total number of crimes committed by minors rebounded after 2017.

From 2014 to 2019, procurator­ial organs investigat­ed and arrested more than 284,000 juvenile suspects, of which nearly 89,000 were dismissed after investigat­ions.

The principle of “educating first and punishing second” is the basic policy for juveniles involved in crimes, said Shi Weizhong, director of the SPP’s ninth procurator­ial office.

Shi said that protection, education and control are indispensa­ble when dealing with minors.

For those who committed minor crimes, the procurator­ates give priority to education or lenient punishment or conditiona­lly exempt them from prosecutio­n, Shi said.

For minors who have not reached the age of criminal responsibi­lity, the procurator­ate takes measures including judicial admonition, pushing compulsory family education and guidance to parents and urging minors involved in serious crimes to be either sent to special schools or taken into custody so that they will not commit crimes again, Shi said.

The procurator­ate is gradually establishi­ng and improving a hierarchic­al interventi­on system for delinquent minors and strengthen­ing judicial protection for juveniles involved in crimes, the director said.

Additional­ly, the white book showed that crimes against minors including sexual assault, using violence to hurt minors and adults coercing minors into committing organized crimes are relatively prominent.

The SPP, together with eight other department­s, issued a trial document on May 29 on the establishm­ent of a compulsory reporting system to strengthen the judicial protection of minors and punish those who commit crimes against them in a timely and effective manner.

The procurator­ate is actively promoting the establishm­ent of a database on criminals who have sexually assaulted minors, and an employment enquiry system to prevent people with a history of such crimes having close contact with minors.

By the end of 2019, Shanghai had enquired about 270,000 people, and 26 former sex offenders were dismissed.

Procurator­ial organs across the country, in collaborat­ion with competent education authoritie­s, inspected 38,600 primary and middle schools and kindergart­ens last year, and supervised the rectificat­ion of more than 6,600 safety problems, Shi said.

Li Xiaoxia, director of the legal committee on education and juvenile protection of the Nanjing bar associatio­n in Jiangsu province, said that juveniles involved in crime are a special group, considerin­g they may have mental, growth and cognitive deficienci­es, and procurator­ial organs are usually urged to be lenient if they commit minor crimes.

“In general, juvenile delinquenc­y has its roots in family, social and environmen­tal reasons,” she said.

“When helping young offenders, we need to understand their growth situations and social experience­s and help them with behavior correction and counseling.”

To prevent crimes against minors, Li suggested parents, schools and communitie­s work together to participat­e in children’s education and growth.

She also called for more opportunit­ies for children to integrate into society, communicat­e with their peers and improve their sense of responsibi­lity and self-protection.

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