Shanghai Daily

Lawmakers deliberate China’s draft civil code

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CHINESE lawmakers yesterday started deliberati­ng a draft civil code as part of the priorities of a session rounding out the country’s legislativ­e work in 2019.

The draft civil code, consisting of general provisions and six sections on property, contracts, personalit­y rights, marriage and family, inheritanc­e, and torts, was submitted to the ongoing bimonthly session of the National People’s Congress Standing Committee, which runs until Saturday.

The draft is expected to be submitted to the annual session of the NPC next year for deliberati­on.

The General Provisions of the Civil Law, which was adopted in 2017, is included in the draft civil code as the first book.

All the other draft books have gone through at least two readings at previous NPC Standing Committee sessions as well as wide consultati­ons from the public and authoritie­s.

The draft will be sent to all national lawmakers to solicit opinions in January, said Shen Chunyao, vice chairman of the NPC Constituti­on and Law Committee, while briefing lawmakers on the draft yesterday.

Previous readings

At the plenary meeting of the session, Shen also briefed lawmakers on the changes made to the general provisions and six other sections of the draft after previous readings.

In the contracts section, the draft makes a clearer stipulatio­n to ban “usury,” stating that “the interest rates of loans shall not violate relevant national regulation­s.”

The stipulatio­n is expected to provide more legal basis to address prominent problems in the area of private lending, said Meng Qiang, director of the research center on civil code at the Beijing Institute of Technology.

Banning usury will encourage people to invest more in the real economy, which will facilitate the high-quality developmen­t of China’s economy, said Wang.

The personalit­y rights section of the draft stipulates that Party and government department­s, enterprise­s, schools and other institutio­ns shall adopt appropriat­e measures to prevent and stop sexual harassment behaviors that take advantage of power or posts, revising a previous unspecific provision.

Other modificati­ons have also been made, such as improvemen­ts on the system of the right of habitation, the definition of privacy and new rules on handling cyberspace torts.

Lawmakers will deliberate the draft civil code in panel discussion­s today.

(Xinhua)

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