Suing China for compensation for COVID-19 unfair, unfeasible, says Aussie expert
By Yang Jingzhong
People's Daily
1590659792000

SYDNEY, May 28 (Xinhua) -- Filing lawsuits against China for compensation for the COVID-19 pandemic is unfair and unfeasible in accordance with international law norms, an Australian expert on law has said.

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File photo by CFP

"Such a case would not set a good precedent," warned Colin Hawes, associate professor with the Law Faculty at University of Technology Sydney, in an email interview with Xinhua on Wednesday.

"Other countries would face similar claims in the future if a virus happened to start in their territory, and viruses don't respect national borders," Hawes said.

Most legal experts have expressed strong doubts whether any lawsuit against China seeking compensation will pass even the first hurdle in foreign courts, which is sovereign immunity.

Most countries don't allow lawsuits to be brought in their own courts against a foreign government, said Hawes.

He said legal experts view these lawsuits more as publicity stunts by entrepreneurial law firms combined with political grandstanding by some politicians, who want to deflect public attention from their own failures to stop the spread of the virus.

Anyone who contracted COVID-19 or has experienced losses caused by the virus is a victim, be him/her Chinese or foreigner, he stressed.

Hawes also advised China to actively reduce tensions with other countries and not to react to "political showboaters," especially in the United States, who he said are mainly playing to their own domestic audiences.