| Legal system
on the right track (03/17/2003)
Senior legal scholars claimed the country is well on track to complete
a comprehensive legal system, with specific Chinese characteristics,
by 2010. To that end the efforts of the 10th National People's Congress
(NPC) are critical.
"It is possible for China to reach the goal in five or six
years if the legislators work in the right direction," said
Xu Xianming, president of China University of Politics and Law.
It is commonly accepted that a comprehensive legal system comprises
constitutional, civil and commercial, administrative, economic,
social, criminal and procedural legislation, which comply with the
basic tenets of the Constitution.
Jiang Enzhu, spokesman of the 10th NPC, said such a legal system
has begun to take shape in the country, with laws governing almost
every aspect of China's political, economic and social life.
The Ninth NPC Standing Committee has completed drafting the supervision
law and the civil code, one of the most important private laws which
deal with the legal rights and relationships of private individuals.
Jiang said the 10th NPC and its Standing Committee, the country's
top lawmaking body, will continue reviewing the draft supervision
law and the draft civil code, which have undergone preliminary checks
by the Ninth NPC Standing Committee.
The legislature will give priority to meeting the needs of the
market economy, social progress and the challenges of World Trade
Organization membership during its five-year term, Jiang added.
The spotlight has been on the draft civil code because it serves
as the cornerstone of civil and commercial legislation.
Wang Liming, a leading civil law professor with Renmin University
of China, said the civil and commercial legislation will be effectively
complete once the civil code is adopted and the Civil Proceeding
Law is revised.
Xu from the China University of Politics and Law agreed. He said
senior legislators should devote much effort to scrutinizing the
draft civil code, one that affects both the daily lives of individuals
and the function of corporations.
Xu, a leading professor of constitutionalism, said the lawmakers
should also carefully seek a legislative balance between private
and public laws - ones that deal with the State or government and
its relationship with individuals or other governments.
"It is vital for the legislators to change their mind-set
when working on public laws," Xu said, adding that they should
focus more on the rights of the public rather than the power of
the administration.
To be more specific, Ying Songnian, professor and director of the
Law Programme with the National School of Administration, said the
nation needs to work out a law on administrative procedures to complete
the administrative legislation.
In order to make better laws, Xu said the legislative process should
be more open to the public. "A bill drawn up with greater participation
of the public will have more vitality and popularity when it becomes
a law," he said, adding that the legislature could even solicit
draft bills from the public.
Turning to the legislative technique, Xu suggested legislation
initiated by administrative departments should be reduced to the
absolute minimum to cut the influence of administrative departments'
interests on legislation.
(China Daily)
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