China's legislature is taking on a new role: a target for interest 
groups to lobby. 
With nearly 3,000 delegates gathered in the capital until next week for the 
annual meeting of the National People's Congress, some representatives of 
different interest groups have also flocked to Beijing. They have been seeking 
to win the ears of delegates on the sidelines of the 10-day meeting on issues 
from tax policy to antidiscrimination measures for hepatitis B carriers. 
 
 
 
   Ethnic minority delegates, 
 dressed up in traditional costumes, arrive at the Great Hall of the 
 People to attend the opening of the National People's Congress (NPC) 
 in China's capital of Beijing March 5, 2006. The annual gathering 
 of top Chinese lawmakers started Sunday morning and will close 
 on March 14, 2006. [Xinhua] | 
Some groups and companies had started seeking out NPC delegates a few years 
ago. But this year, the lobbying has picked up markedly, delegates say. 
Delegates -- who meet once a year to discuss and approve the premier's work 
report, the state budget and any bills that have been teed up -- are also 
becoming more outspoken in representing their constituencies. The trend 
underscores the rise of various interest groups in China amid a pluralization of 
society and the growth of a middle class -- as well as the lack of other 
effective channels for people to push their causes. 
Still, analysts and others are welcoming the changes as a step towards a more 
transparent legal system and more influential legislature. Such a development is 
important at a time when market changes breed corruption and other abuses of 
power, sparking growing unrest and discontent among an increasingly vocal 
population. 
"These proposals reflect public opinion, which will make the central 
government pay more attention while drafting legislation," says Cai Dingjian, a 
professor at China University of Political Science and Law and a former NPC 
official. "This is the basic function that NPC delegates should play." 
The NPC's bill-reviewing group declined to comment on lobbying activities. 
According to NPC statistics, the number of bills proposed by delegates and 
accepted by the congress for review has risen steadily in recent years, more 
than tripling to 991 last year from 2001. 
Under China's legislative system, the NPC's standing committee conveys any 
proposed bills to relevant ministries, which then decide whether to turn them 
into formal legislation to be approved by the NPC. 
Qi Dong, a deputy secretary general of the China Market Association, a 
semiofficial research organization that also represents Chinese peddlers and 
their markets, is hoping the NPC will take up his cause to better protect 
private vendors. 
After hearing complaints from peddlers around the country about being 
overcharged for rent and overtaxed, he persuaded an NPC delegate from his 
province of Zhejiang -- home to many private businessmen -- to submit his draft 
of a proposed "Law of Commodity Exchange Markets" at this year's meeting. 
Mr. Qi says he got to know the delegate, Zhou Xiaoguang, a private 
jewelry-company owner, after attending several public hearings she held to learn 
about her constituents' beefs. 
Beijing-based lawyer Xiao Taifu's proposed bill to unify tax rates for 
domestic and foreign-invested companies in China is also being submitted to the 
NPC. Chinese policy makers have said they are moving towards reunification of 
the tax system, which currently favors foreign companies over domestic ones. But 
the policy change has been delayed by two years, partly due to opposition from 
foreign firms. 
"Gaining public support is the first step [in making] legislation, because 
every law and regulation should reflect public opinion. We are doing this to 
help the government give up its worries and make up its mind," says Mr. Xiao, 
adding that he persuaded a delegate from Sichuan province to take up his cause. 
Mr. Xiao says he isn't acting on behalf of any companies. 
Lu Jun, Web master of an Internet site for hepatitis B carriers, traveled to 
Beijing recently to seek support for carriers from legislators and members of 
another elected body, the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, 
which is also now convening in Beijing. 
Mr. Lu, from Henan province, says at least two NPC delegates and the Chinese 
Peasants' and Workers' Democratic Party, a minority party representing medical 
professionals in the CPPCC, have agreed to submit his proposal to protect 
carriers' rights at their respective meetings, after he presented examples of 
discrimination against carriers. 
China's 120 million carriers of the contagious liver disease have faced 
widespread discrimination, with some companies refusing to hire carriers and 
universities forcing them to drop out. "We are a social vulnerable group, and we 
need a specialized law to protect us," Mr. Lu says. 
Delegates themselves, meanwhile, have become more receptive to taking on 
various causes -- and more aggressive in speaking up for their constituencies, 
analysts say. 
One reason is their higher education level. In the past, the NPC 
representatives -- elected by provincial people's congress delegates from a 
restricted field of candidates -- mostly were model workers, heroic soldiers and 
other such people. In the early 1990s, only 56% of the delegates had a college 
education. In the current congress, elected in 2002, 92.5% did. 
Beijing has also sought to beef up the NPC's role as a legislative body. Last 
year, the NPC asked delegates to submit any bill proposals in the form of formal 
legislation. Many delegates have sought the help of lawyers to draft bills. 
NPC delegates assume their legislative roles only for a few days each year 
and don't have full-time staff. They also tend to keep their full-time jobs, 
whether in the state or private sectors. While this sometimes leads to conflicts 
of interest, it also helps them understand the needs of their constituents, 
analysts say. 
Take Han Deyun, a delegate from the southwestern city of Chongqing and a 
lawyer by trade. He has submitted a draft amendment to the National Compensation 
Law, to make it easier for lawyers to help clients gain compensation for claims 
on wrongful imprisonment, detention and execution, and to raise compensation 
amounts. Many other lawyers favor such changes.