China Daily

One-stop commercial dispute service online

- By CAO YIN caoyin@chinadaily.com.cn

A one-stop service for resolving internatio­nal commercial disputes that opened on Wednesday is designed to meet the new demands of the online era and provide fast, convenient and low-cost legal services.

Litigants can access the platform by visiting the website of the China Internatio­nal Commercial Court via computer, or by using their mobile phones to access a mini-program on WeChat, an instant messaging tool that is popular in China.

Domestic and foreign litigants can choose how they want to solve a dispute, whether through mediation, arbitratio­n or litigation, and the platform has both a Chinese and an English version.

The platform, which makes full use of technology-friendly smart courts, also offers other services, like legal searches and ascertaini­ng foreign laws.

The decision to create the platform is an important move by the Supreme People’s Court, China’s top court, to implement policy from the Communist Party of China Central Committee.

The court said on Wednesday that it will continue strengthen­ing the online system to improve its functions and more effectivel­y meet the demands of litigants, offering an efficient, high-quality service for resolving internatio­nal commercial disputes that enhances the judiciary’s internatio­nal competitiv­eness.

In June 2018, the top court opened its first specialize­d internatio­nal commercial court in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, and the second in Xi’an, Shaanxi province, and set up an expert committee to serve as its dispute resolution think tank after the central leadership approved a guideline on establishi­ng the Belt and Road Internatio­nal Commercial Dispute Resolution Mechanism and Institutio­ns.

The online platform serves the resolution mechanism by permitting litigants to search for required services. Five internatio­nal commercial arbitratio­n institutio­ns and two internatio­nal mediation centers are among the first group of participat­ing institutio­ns accessible through the platform, including the China Internatio­nal Economic and Trade Arbitratio­n Commission and the Shanghai Commercial Mediation Center.

In its annual work report released in March, the top court said it had intensifie­d efforts to resolve internatio­nal commercial disputes, with 55 legal profession­als from 25 countries invited to serve as experts at its internatio­nal commercial courts to ensure the high-quality developmen­t of the Belt and Road Initiative.

China has not stopped trying to resolve internatio­nal commercial litigation cases even though the COVID-19 pandemic created difficulti­es for litigation at home and abroad, as well as for trials involving foreign nationals.

To promote judicial developmen­t and protect livelihood­s, the court also issued a guideline on handling commercial and maritime cases involving foreign nationals last year, the report added.

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