爽死777影院的网址,三级片网站免费看中文字幕,色欲天天婬香婬色视频,美女mm131暴爽毛片韩国

China Justice Observer

中司觀察

EnglishArabicChinese (Simplified)DutchFrenchGermanHindiItalianJapaneseKoreanPortugueseRussianSpanishSwedishHebrewIndonesianVietnameseThaiTurkishMalay

China’s First Public Interest Lawsuit on Cultural Heritage Protection Ruled

Mon, 10 Oct 2022
Categories: China Legal Trends

On 30 Aug. 2022, the Jiujiang Intermediate People’s Court of Jiangxi Province (hereinafter the “Jiujiang Intermediate Court”) held a public hearing for a public interest lawsuit filed by the Jiujiang People’s Procuratorate against the defendant Chen for the protection of movable cultural relics. At the hearing, the Jiujiang Intermediate Court rendered the first-instance judgment, in which it required the defendant to bear the cost for cultural relics restoration (CNY 100,000) and the expert evaluation cost, and to publish an apology statement in the national media.

This is China’s first public-interest civil lawsuit involving the protection of movable cultural relics. For more information on Chinese procuratorates’ authority in public litigation, please read our previous post, “How China’s Procuratorates Conducts Public Interest Litigation?”.

In 2020, the defendant Chen excavated an antique bronze bell without permission and caused damage to it. In December 2021, Chen was sentenced to two years and five months in prison and fined CNY 20,000 for the illicit trafficking of cultural relics.

The Jiujiang Intermediate Court held those cultural relics, as the tangible remains of history, are of non-renewable and irreplaceable value to history, science, and art. In the court’s view, Chen’s damage to cultural relics had harmed the public interest, and therefore he should bear criminal and tort liability.

 

 

Cover Photo by Alessio Lin on Unsplash

Contributors: CJO Staff Contributors Team

Save as PDF

You might also like

SPC Releases Typical Labor Dispute Cases

In April 2024, China's Supreme People's Court (SPC) released six typical cases on labor disputes to guide similar cases, emphasizing worker rights and clarifying limitations on non-compete agreements.

China Cracks Down on Securities and Futures Violations

In May 2024, China’s Supreme People’s Court, Supreme People’s Procuratorate, Ministry of Public Security, and China Securities Regulatory Commission jointly issued new regulations to intensify enforcement against securities and futures violations, integrating administrative and criminal justice measures to protect market integrity.

First Thai Monetary Judgment Enforced in China, Highlighting Presumptive Reciprocity in China-ASEAN Region

In 2024, a local Chinese court in Nanning, Guangxi, ruled to recognize and enforce a Thai monetary judgment. Apart from being the first case of enforcing Thai monetary judgments in China, it is also the first publicly reported case confirming a reciprocal relationship based on “presumptive reciprocity” (Guangxi Nanning China Travel Service Co., Ltd. v. Orient Thai Airlines Co., Ltd. (2023) Gui 71 Xie Wai Ren No. 1).

China Regulates Internet Unfair Competition

In May 2024, China’s State Administration for Market Regulation introduced the "Interim Provisions on Anti-Unfair Competition on the Internet," effective September 1, 2024, to address issues like fake reviews and data scraping, aiming to ensure fair competition and protect users and operators in the digital economy.

China Enacts Tariff Law

In April 2024, China's legislature adopted the Tariff Law, effective December 1, 2024, establishing the legislative framework for tariff administration and clarifying tariff authorities, payers, exemptions, and preferential policies.

China Enacts Academic Degrees Law

China's legislature passed the Academic Degrees Law to regulate degree granting, ensure degree quality, and protect the rights of degree applicants, effective January 1, 2025.