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| Draft property law tabled in legislature for 6th reading |
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| www.chinaview.cn
2006-10-20 20:33:05
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BEIJING, Oct. 20 (Xinhua) -- China's controversial
draft property law, a sweeping bill designed to protect both public and private
ownership, is about to be submitted to the country's top legislature for the
sixth time.
The Standing Committee of the National People's
Congress (NPC) will convene next Friday for a five-day regular legislative
session. Sources close to the NPC on Friday said the draft property law would be
a key issue on the agenda.
The draft was first submitted to the legislature in
2002 and has gone through a rare fifth reading. It was withdrawn from the NPC
full session in March amid worries that the draft, the country's first specific
law to protect private ownership, could undermine the legal foundation of
China's socialist system.
But opposition faded after drafters revised the fifth
version in August to install state ownership at the heart of the economic
system.
Drafters said that, in the Chinese context, the
primary concern in making a property law is to comprehensively and accurately
reflect China's economic system in which public ownership plays a dominant role
and diverse forms of ownership develop side by side
Lawmakers on the NPC Standing Committee appeared to
have achieved an ideological consensus on the draft, and the debate moved on to
specific issues such as the ownership of parking spaces, the transfer of rural
housing, and the law's coverage of rivers and oceans.
During the process lawmakers have collected more than
15,000 suggestions from the general public, who have showed enormous interest in
the draft law.
It is hoped that the marathon legislative process
will end next March with a vote by the full NPC session.
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