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Public hearings driving the engine of democracy By Gong Yidong (Xinhua) Updated: 2006-10-05 10:38 A dozen municipalities and provinces have also turned to hearings to collect
public opinions before formulating local statutes and regulations. The hearing
system has paid off as it makes the administrative organs more transparent in
their working style, says Prof. Ma.
"People observe with their own eyes
the process of administration and legislation brought out from the backstage, or
even from under the table, to front and center," he says.
In spite of
such achievements, observers argue the hearing system in China still has too
many loopholes. For one thing, the selection of representatives to a hearing is
not scientific, according to Ying Songnian, a professor from the China National
School of Administration.
"China is embracing a multi-faceted society,
but there are not many mature interest groups representing a different voice,"
he says. In some cases, the representatives are randomly designated by the
sponsor at their own will, "whose independence is thus incredible," Ying says.
Take a hearing held in Beijing last year for example. All 20
representatives voted unanimously for an increase in the price of electricity.
Embarrassingly, previous online surveys carried out by Sohu.com and Sina.com,
two influential online portals, showed more than 80 percent of voters opposed
the same proposal.
Moreover, minutes and memorandums of hearings should
be made public, including the representatives' presentations in detail,
according to Ying.
"People have the right to know what the participants
talked about at the hearing. Without real transparency, the hearing risks being
a simple rubber stamp exercise."
Keeping files confidential is a
practice at hearings opposed by a Tsinghua professor and attendee at a recent
hearing on taxi fares in Beijing. The sponsor, Beijing Municipal Commission of
Reform and Development, prepared a lengthy report before the meeting, Chen
Jianmin recalls, but it was kept secret for 40 days.
"I don't see any
point in hiding it. It makes no sense," she says.
Wang Xixin, a Peking
University scholar of administrative law, goes further. The hearing system, he
warns, now has a crisis of trust.
"Efforts should be made so that the
hearing system does not get manipulated as a political showcase or deviate from
the basic principles of democracy." Cui Yansheng urges the government to listen
earnestly to the views expressed at public hearings.
"I believe in the
hearing system -- it's a convincing expression of ren min dang jia zuo zhu [the
people are masters of the state], right?" laughs Cui. He is already making
preparations for his 22nd hearing, in two months' time.
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