BEIJING, Jan. 4 (Xinhuanet) -- The word "private" has
long been a centre of attention and the focus of much debate among politicians,
scholars, and the public over its place in society.
But now, the seemingly certain revision of China's Constitution specifying the inviolability of legal private
property, among other things, will put a final punctuation mark to most of the
debate surrounding the word and the social concepts that tag along with it.
Yet China still has a long way to go to fully protect
private rights.
"Even if the constitutional amendment is passed
without problem at the plenary meeting of National People's Congress (NPC),
there will still be a lot of work to be done, such as adjusting laws and
regulations, to ensure the implementation of the amended constitution in
society," said Cai Dingjian, a senior legal researcher with the standing
committee of the NPC, China's legislature.
Members of the Standing Committee of NPC passed the
draft amendments to the Constitution in Beijing on Saturday. The draft was
proposed by the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China (CPC).
The amendments will be handed over to the second
annual session of the NPC in March next year for final approval.
The concepts embodied in the "Three Represents" are
also to be written into China's constitution, along with the amendments to
safeguard the ownership of private property.
The proposed revision on private property protection
puts private assets of Chinese citizens on an equal footing with public
property, both of which are "not to be violated."
This is a natural result of China's social and
economic development in recent years, said Lian Xisheng, a renowned legal
scholar with China University of Politics and Law.
Lian was former vice-chairman of the China
Constitution Society, and he has participated in the process of constitutional
amendments.
But such amendments are by no means easily achieved.
According to Lian, before the constitutional amendment in 1999, many legal
scholars had appealed to add the article on the inviolability of private
property, but the proposal was eventually abandoned due to strong opposition
within the CPC.
Following the founding of the People's Republic of
China in 1949, the word "private," and such terms as private interests, private
property, and private concerns, became targets of attack.
Chinese people over 50 years of age still clearly
remember the old slogans like: "Destroy the word private whenever it appears."
China's reform and opening-up, which began in 1978,
loosened the strict social and economic controls exercised by the State and
produced millions of private entrepreneurs or capitalists. However, for a rather
long period they could only be called "minying," (citizen-operated) enterprises,
not private enterprises.
"However, the practice of encouraging the private
sector of the economy but avoiding reference to its existence in ideology and
the law no longer sits well with the rising private sector," Lian told China
Business Weekly.
Many private entrepreneurs feel their assets might be
subject to State takeover or control, if they have not been given legal status
in the Constitution, Lian added.
The concepts embodied in former president Jiang
Zemin's "Three Represents" indicate that the CPC is not only the vanguard of the
working class but also the representative of the basic interests of the majority
of the people, and Jiang's call to allow eligible private entrepreneurs to join
the Party, eventually led them to enjoy equal status with the working class.
So enshrining the "Three Represents" in the opening
section of the Constitution is in no way bowing to dogma, Lian said.
Mao Yushi, a famous economist with the Beijing-based
private Institute of Unirule, said that what the private property amendment in
the constitution will protect is far more than just private capitalists or
entrepreneurs.
According to Mao, China's private assets had
surpassed 11 trillion yuan (US$1.33 trillion) by the end of 2002, exceeding
State assets by about 1 trillion yuan (US$121 million).
Most of these private assets are not owned by private
entrepreneurs but by common citizens.
Common citizen's assets need more protection in the
constitution because their right to hold their own assets is more likely to be
infringed upon by the public power and the rich, Mao said.
A typical public infringement of private property
rights is the forcible relocation of urban and rural residents in the process of
developing real estate projects or the construction of economic projects.
Millions of urban and rural residents have been
forced to leave their homes with inadequate compensation.
To address this problem, the proposed constitutional
amendment adds "the State should give compensation" to the original stipulation
that "the State has the right to expropriate urban and rural land."
In China, urban land belongs to the State while rural
land is legally stipulated as being collectively owned, which in practice means
that it is owned by township governments.
However, legal scholars argue that residents' housing
on State-owned land should also be compensated for as private property at a
market-based price.
"The new stipulation that the 'State should give
compensation' is a major step forward in protecting private property, but
exactly what kind of compensation should be given is not stated in the amendment
because during the constitutional revision process there was conflicting debate
over this issue," Lian said.
The proposed constitutional amendment also adds that
"the State protects human rights" and includes provisions on State emergencies,
and extensions of the president's authority in foreign affairs as well as on the
national anthem.
It also specifies that special administrative regions
like Hong Kong and Macao must be given equal footing in electing NPC delegates.
Other legal scholars question the draft
constitutional amendment's use of the word "State."
"What is State, is it the government or a combination
of the government and the people? The articles of the Constitution should
clearly define the term so that laws which use the term, such as the proposed
State-owned asset management law, can be made crystal clear," said Sun Jianjun,
a legal columnist with China Youth Daily.
Quite apart from the debate over constitutional
terms, it is important to ensure the authority of the Constitution and its full
and effective implementation through appropriate adjustments to the current
legal system.
While some existing laws contradict some of the
stipulations in the proposed Constitutional amendments, many more elements of
the currently and commonly accepted laws are contradictory to the amendment, Cai
said.
China's laws give too many advantages to the
government and too few to the common people, making it hard for ordinary people
to win against government in legal and economic disputes, Cai said. The
situation runs contrary to the principle that "the State protects private
property and human rights," he added. Enditem
(China Business Weekly)