blogs  
 
yournews
   
Video Photos Finance Travel Weather Discussion TV Shows
| |
 
  Home ›
 
Asia Pacific News

 

China lawyers told not to take rail crash cases
Posted: 30 July 2011 2044 hrs

  Wreckage of the high-speed train carriage after the fatal collision in Shuangyu, Wenzhou (CHINA OUT AFP PHOTO)
 
Photos  of

   
 
Related News
China train crash signal designer apologises
China rail crash families refusing payouts
China train crash payments almost double
China rail minister calls crash a 'bitter lesson'


BEIJING: Legal authorities in China ordered lawyers not to take on cases from the families of victims of last weekend's fatal train crash, it emerged Saturday, as judicial officials apologised for the move.

Three days after the crash near Wenzhou in eastern China, law firms in the city received an "urgent statement" in the names of the Wenzhou Judicial Bureau and the Wenzhou Lawyers' Association, the official Xinhua news agency said Saturday.

The statement said lawyers should report to the two organisations "immediately after the injured passengers and families of the deceased in the accident come for legal help," the agency reported.

Xinhua said the statement also told lawyers not to "unauthorised respond and handle the cases," because "the accident is a major sensitive issue concerning social stability".

Forty people were killed when two high-speed trains collided last Saturday on the outskirts of Wenzhou, the worst accident yet to hit China's rapidly expanding high-speed network.

There has been widespread criticism of the government's handling of the accident and its aftermath in Chinese media and online, and the instructions to lawyers prompted an angry response when they were publicised by web users.

"The judicial authorities and the lawyers' association in Wenzhou have banned lawyers from taking victims' cases. Who are they working for? I'm having doubts about the independence of Chinese justice," wrote one web user, Dianfuzishangwudeguairen, on the Sina microblog service.

The Wenzhou Judicial Bureau apologised for the statement, which it said the lawyers' group had issued without its approval.

"We didn't know the content of the statement before it was released. It was written by the lawyers' association, which used our name without authorisation," Liu Xianping, director of the bureau's office, said in remarks quoted by Xinhua.

A Wenzhou Lawyers' Association spokesman confirmed this version of events, Xinhua said, adding they issued the order because they feared "conflicts would be generated if legal services are not well-provided".

Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao has ordered an "open and transparent" probe into the crash and said those responsible would be "severely punished".

- AFP/fa

 



Other asiapacific News
Myanmar's Suu Kyi to visit Bangkok from May 30
Tokyo raises 1 billion yen to buy China-disputed islets
'Bomb' threat forces plane back to Australia
Pakistani jailed for 33 years over bin Laden hunt
Aung San Suu Kyi to address UK parliament on June 21
Indian PM says govt must "do better" as woes mount
Top Philippine judge ordered back to witness stand
Fiji defends military's election role
Australian tycoon 'is world's richest woman'
Mario Bros creator Miyamoto wins top Spanish prize
Seoul's naval base plan faces opposition
Hospital violence on the rise in China
China sends more ships to disputed shoal
Defiant Myanmar protesters return to streets
6.1-magnitude quake hits Japan
Philippines says China sending more ships to shoal
Iran's Ahmadinejad to visit China: embassy
N. Korea human rights abuses more urgent than nukes: S.Korea
South Korea to chemically castrate sex offender
China cancels high-level military visit to Japan
Top Philippine judge in hospital after court drama

 

 
Affiliate Sites:
 
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  Advertise with Us  |  Terms & Conditions