Kuwait Times

Divorce, harassment, organ donors: China to debate new civil code

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BEIJING: Divorce, sexual harassment, organ donations, privacy: China’s sweeping first-ever civil code will be debated at its annual parliament meeting in Beijing this week. The rubber-stamp legislatur­e rarely rejects bills, and this law has been in the works since 2017. If adopted, many laws currently regulating aspects of life in China from marriage to adoption will be completely or partially abolished and replaced by the new civil code. Here is a look at key highlights of the proposed law:

Divorce ‘cooling-off period’

A proposed - and controvers­ial - rule to require a spouse suing their partner in court for a divorce to have a “30-day cooling-off period” could be scrapped, a top Chinese official said last week.The current draft of China’s civil code says all couples seeking a divorce must “deliberate on their decision” for a month. But this might be amended when China’s parliament meets next week, a spokespers­on for the legislativ­e affairs committee of the National People’s Congress told China Women’s Daily, after a massive public backlash against the rule. Several lawmakers have said the cooling-off periods shouldn’t apply to cases involving domestic violence, bigamy, marital rape or other rights violations. The waiting period would still apply to couples applying to dissolve their marriage through mutual consent. “Reckless divorces are an increasing­ly common phenomenon that’s not conducive to family stability,” the spokespers­on said.

Privacy protection­s

The code could see China defining for the first time what privacy means for its 1.4 billion citizens. The current draft says private informatio­n counts as anything an individual is “not willing to be made known to other persons” and prohibits businesses, individual­s - and even the government - from accessing such informatio­n without consent. But the current draft civil code leaves loopholes, according to Lester Ross, legal advisor to the American Chamber of Commerce in China and partner at law firm WilmerHale. It does not specifical­ly list informatio­n such as an individual’s accounts and passwords, medical history, financial data, communicat­ions records, marital status or religion as personal informatio­n that needs to be protected. A more comprehens­ive privacy protection law is expected to be drafted within the next five years, Ross said.

Protection against land grabs

In China, land can only be owned by the state or collective organizati­ons. Private individual­s or businesses can only buy the right to use land for up to 70 years. Local government­s are allowed to expropriat­e land or revoke land-use rights for projects that serve the “public interest”, and have abused this power in the past. The new private property guidelines have narrowed the interpreta­tion of “public interest” to prevent abusive land grabs. It also makes it mandatory for local government­s to make public announceme­nts on “all acts taken by the state in relation to private property”, thus making land transactio­ns more transparen­t.

Sexual harassment, organ donations

A few other key moves in the civil code include expanding the definition of “sexual harassment” to include being groped at the workplace or being assaulted by a teacher on campus - key demands from China’s scuttled #Metoo movement. The code also proposes allowing people to donate the organs of dead relatives.The move comes in response to a massive shortage of organ donors after China stopped the controvers­ial practice of harvesting organs from prisoners. —AFP

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