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Lawyers play bigger role in China’s parliament
BEIJING—The number of lawyers
participating in China’s current term of parliament and top political
advisory body reached 22, an increase of 80 percent over the previous
term, said Yu Ning, chairman of the All China Lawyers Association (ACLA).
“The increase is in line with the development of modern society and a
result of China’s progress in building a society ruled by law,” Yu said.
National legislators and advisors include deputies to the National
People’s Congress (NPC) and members of the National Committee of the
Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC).
According to the ACLA, more than 800 lawyers now serve as deputies to
people’s congresses at various levels across the country. Yu said
lawyers have extensive contact with all sectors of society and learn
about the public interests and appeals. They are able to express views
on behalf of the masses based on their professional knowledge.
Han Deyun, a lawyer with the Chongqing-based Suotong Lawyer Office, has
just begun his second five-year term as an NPC deputy, or national
legislator. He said that as China’s objective of governing by law
becomes more clear-cut, there will be more scope for lawyers to better
perform their duties as lawmakers and political advisors. Han said when
he performs his duty as a legislator, he not only pays attention to the
interests of lawyers but also helps express the appeals of low-income
citizens.
Han once taught law at the Southwest University of Political Science and
Law. In 1995, he left teaching and became a lawyer. Currently, he
provides legal consultation to governmental departments and companies.
Liu Ling works for a legal office in east China’s Jiangsu Province and
is a new NPC deputy. She is engaged in the litigation of about 50 cases
a year concerning real estate disputes, corporate law, and officials’
crimes. She also provides legal consultation in business areas.
“Lawyers learn much about social contradictions and can identify
societal problems. My experience in practicing law can help me better
perform duties as an NPC deputy,” Liu said. Chen Shu, secretary-general
of the Guangzhou Bar Association in southern Guangdong Province, has
been re-elected an NPC deputy.
She once proposed to the top legislature the establishment of a
taskforce to examine the regulations putting vagrants and beggars into
custody, after a 2003 incident in which Sun Zhigang, a 27-year-old
designer who traveled to Guangzhou to seek work, was beaten to death
after he was detained for failing to provide a residence permit or
identification card.
—Xinhua |