First suit filed against China’s Sanlu

Written by changthai11 on Tuesday, October 7th, 2008

First suit filed against ’s Sanlu

Xie Chuanjiao

’s Sanlu Group, the dairy giant at the center of the tainted scandal, might face its first lawsuit from victims, as a in Central ’s will determine whether or not it will accept the first filed case within the week.

“The court will mail the reply to us within a , and we are suppose to receive it soon,” Lawyer Ji Cheng with Beijing-based Deheng Law Firm told Monday.

Ji and a colleague filed a lawsuit against the manufacturer on Sept 22 on behalf of the parents of a 1-year-old boy from Zhenping county of who was allegedly sickened by tainted .

Ji declined to disclose the clients’ names.

The attorney said the parents claim the boy developed from drinking Sanlu, and that they had more than 90 of Sanlu their son had consumed as proof.

Li Dongyang, an 8-month-old diagnosed with , gets an from a in a hospital in Hefei, capital of Anhui province on , 2008.

He said they are seeking compensation of at least 150,000 ($21,900) to cover hospital fees, , time off from work and other costs.

“As the child is still hospitalised, we will revise the compensation to befit increasing and other costs,” Ji said.

Ji was among more than 124 lawyers from 22 provinces and who have taken up the cause of victims on a pro since Sept 15.

On Sept 24, the lawyers suggested establishing a special fund for the victims, according to an announcement on news.163.com.

They called on the Consumers’ Association to join in and talk to responsible to develop a package for victims.

Lawyers also suggested the establish a database to track the health of victims’ babies, said Chang Boyang, another from Henan-based Yatairen Law Firm.

“What if the later cause other health problems?” Chang asked.

They also advised judicial departments to consider class action lawsuits against responsible enterprises.

So far, neither the health ministry nor the consumers’ association has replied, Chang said.

In addition to Ji’s clients, some other victims are also filing lawsuits nationwide.

Liu Junhai, a law professor with Renmin University of , said the case involves a huge number of people, and public awareness about protecting citizens’ rights and interests is greater than before.

“Individual lawsuits can achieve justice for some, but more will choose to give up on the lawsuits because of high costs or other reasons. These people will have no way of letting out their bitter feelings,” Nanfang Weekend quoted Liu as saying Monday.

Individual lawsuits will also waste judiciary resources and will likely take a long time to resolve.

Ji learned from relevant departments that it is very likely the government will announce a unified but added the date was yet unknown.

News Topics Related Posts :

News Topics : , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

This entry was posted on Tuesday, October 7th, 2008 and is filed under China News. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

Sponsor Results

Advertisement

Bookmarks Me

del.icio.us Digg Furl Reddit Ask BlinkList Bloglines blogmarks BUMPzee Blogg-Buzz DZone Facebook Google Ma.gnolia Mixx MisterWong muti Newsvine PlugIM ppnow Propeller Rojo Shadows Simpy Slashdot Socializer Sphere Sphinn Spurl StumbleUpon Tailrank Technorati ThisNext Twitter Windows Live Wists YahooMyWeb