China is increasingly turning to a powerful legal tool in its fight against pollution: procuratorial public interest litigation. By leveraging the possibility of legal action, prosecutors are helping break down bureaucratic barriers and strengthen environmental law enforcement.
June 10, 2026The opening ceremony of the third training session for foreign-related legal personnel of the SPP was held on June 8.
June 9, 2026As environmental crimes increasingly cross borders and threaten ecosystems, communities and sustainable development, prosecutors and experts called for stronger cooperation to close enforcement gaps and improve global environmental governance at a roundtable meeting in Beijing on June 8.
June 9, 2026Ying Yong, Secretary of the Party Leadership Group and Prosecutor General of the SPP, held a symposium with national procuratorial experts on June 8.
June 8, 2026The SPP pledged to intensify efforts against business-related crimes, including internal corruption, contract fraud, embezzlement and bid rigging, in a bid to strengthen legal protections for private enterprises.
June 5, 2026The SPP held the 27th National Conference on Research of Procuratorial Theory and the Annual Meeting of the Procuratorial Studies Research Association of the China Law Society in Nanning, capital city of South China's Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region, on June 3.
June 3, 2026China's procuratorial organs have launched a yearlong public interest litigation campaign to strengthen water pollution control in the Yangtze River Economic Belt, part of broader efforts to protect the country's most important river basin and support high-quality development.
June 3, 2026From May 25 to 29, a specialized training session on case quality evaluation was held at the National Prosecutors College.
June 2, 2026