A senior environmental protection official has urged for more
supervision and participation from the public to ensure success in
the country's fight against worsening pollution.
"The ultimate impetus to the solution to China's grave
environment issue will come from the public," Pan Yue,
vice-minister of the State Environmental Protection Administration
(SEPA), said.
"(The public) should fully implement their right to know, to
participate, to express and to supervise, as granted by the
Constitution, so that they can engage in deeper participation in
the environmental protection campaign."
Pan, who is also head of the China Environment Culture Promotion
Association, made the call on Saturday at the launch ceremony for
"Green China Public Interest Day for Environmental Protection".
The event, which was held simultaneously in eight Chinese
mainland cities, aimed to promote awareness for environmental
protection among the public and encourage their participation.
Pan said attracting more public participation and upgrading
environmental protection legislation were equally urgent and
important.
He said that to encourage public participation the SEPA would
enact the first regulation on environment information publicity in
the first half of this year in a bid to improve transparency.
The new regulation will follow the implementation of the
regulation on methods for public participation in environmental
protection evaluation.
"All these moves are aimed at laying a base for cultivating the
spirit of public interest (to participate in environmental
protection," Pan said.
The official said China's economic development has been
restricted by the rapid decrease in farmland, freshwater, minerals
and forest, and the health of the people was at risk from water,
air and soil pollution.
The number of lawsuits and collective crises caused by
environmental issues is growing by 30 percent each year, he
said.
Nearly 1,000 representatives from all circles planted 5,000
trees Saturday morning in Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Shenzhen
in southern Guangdong Province, Fuzhou and Nanchang in eastern
Fujian and Jiangxi provinces, Zhengzhou in central Henan Province
and Xi'an in northwestern Shaanxi Province.
In Beijing, Pan and other public figures from art, literature,
academic circles and some NGO organizations have in all planted
2,008 trees at the foot of the Badaling section of the Great
Wall.
The eight cities will also hold more events to propose the
establishment of an environment protection public-interest day.
(China Daily April 2, 2007)
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