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Protests in China over the one child policy
By Dragan Stankovic and John Chan
1 June 2007
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A fortnight ago, a series of riots and protests erupted in
towns and villages in Bobai County in Chinas southwestern
province of Guangxi against the imposition of fines for breaching
the countrys birth control policies. Urban families are
permitted one child and rural families two, if the first was a
girl or disabled. Ethnic minorities are allowed more children.
In the largest riot in the town of Shapi on May 19, some 10,000
protesters clashed with hundreds of anti-riot police armed with
guns and electric cattle prods. The police were bussed in after
demonstrators had pulled down a wall, chased and beat officials
from the family planning department, smashed cars and lit fires.
Some 28 people were reportedly detained.
In the previous few days, protests took place in at least seven
other villages as family planning officers throughout Bobai County
used heavy-handed methods to collect outstanding fines from families
with more than one child. One villager told the press that one
riot broke out after the authorities bulldozed the home of a poor
farmer who said he could not afford to pay the fine. When he complained
to municipal officials, his fingers were broken.
According to the Washington Post: The disorder,
which rolled from village to village, caused a number of injuries
to police and protesters... Townspeople and villagers said an
unknown number of people were killed, but this was not confirmed.
Several people reported seeing police carrying pistols and rifles,
but there were no first hand reports of gunfire.
A witness in the town of Dunbu told the newspaper that two
dozen uniformed officials carrying electric cattle prods barged
into a nearby store and threatened to confiscate goods if the
owner did not pay his fine. Locals quickly gathered and police
were brought in. Several thousand protesters clashed with police
who broke up the demonstration and imposed a curfew.
Chinese reporters were barred from the area and news of the
protests in the state-owned media was heavily censored. The official
Xinhua newsagency blamed villagers, saying: Violations of
the family planning policies are common in Bobai as local residents
still hold to the traditional idea that having more children brings
more happiness.
Responsibility for the riots, however, rests squarely with
the Chinese government and the Stalinist Chinese Communist Party
(CCP). Liu Qibao, the provincial party boss in Guangxi, is a rising
political star, closely associated with President Hu Jintaos
party faction. Since his appointment six years ago, he has become
well known for aggressive policies aimed at making the province
economically competitive. At a family planning conference
in February, he gave a yellow card warning to the
Bobai authorities for falling behind in meeting the quotas of
the one child policy.
In order to clear the yellow card by August, officials
in Bobai County and their superiors in the regional centre of
Yulin city implemented a repressive campaign of forced sterilisation
of women and property confiscation in lieu of fines. Between February
6 and April 10, Yulin carried out 48,554 sterilisations and collected
some 27.6 million yuan (about $US3.5 million) in fines. The local
Guangxi Daily praised the Yulin city government and hailed
the one child policy as positive factor for social harmony.
Previously, the enforcement of fines in Bobai County had been
lax because the vast majority of people are poor rice and pineapple
farmers. It is not uncommon for families to have three or more
children. Some families have children born in the 1980s and the
fines accumulated each year. People with five children faced the
choice of paying 15 times their annual income on the spot or having
their possessions seized. If the possessions did not cover the
fine, the homes would be damaged or demolished.
One villager with the surname Wu told the media: The
family planning officials were just like the Japanese invaders
during the war. They took everything away and destroyed or tore
down the houses if people could not pay the fines. In some families,
even the gate and the bowls were taken away, leaving them with
an empty house.
The one child policy, imposed by Deng Xiaoping in 1979, was
a bureaucratic response to Chinas expanding population.
Maos encouragement of large rural families as part of his
policy of rural self-sufficiency, combined with improved health
care and increased life expectancy, led to a sharp jump in the
population. Between 1949 and 1979, it increased from 540 million
to 800 million.
Deng blamed Chinas economic backwardness on overpopulation
and imposed a strict policy of allowing each couple to have just
one child. Today, the Beijing leadership continues to blame the
rising population for the lack of sufficient teachers, hospital
beds and growing unemployment. In fact, the social insecurity
produced by widespread poverty and lack of basic services is one
of the main motivations, particularly in rural areas, for large
families.
Chen Hua told the Washington Post that she and her husband,
a farmer, had been forced to pay a substantial fine after the
birth of their second childa son. Under government policy,
he had been born too soon after their daughter. Its
worth it, she said. We finally got a son. In our area,
if you dont have a son, you havent made it. In the
countryside, if we dont have a son, who will take care of
us when we are old?
The preference for a boy rather than a girl, especially in
rural areas, has also led to a serious gender imbalance in China.
According to official statistics, 119 boys are born for 100 girls.
By 2020, it is estimated that about 40 million Chinese males may
have to live as bachelors.
Far from overcoming social inequality, the Chinese leaderships
policies of unbridled market reforms have deepened the divide
between rich and poor. Widespread rural poverty is essential for
driving millions into the cities to provide a vast pool of cheap
labour for global corporations and local companies.
Like every other aspect of social policy, the Chinese government
responds to the growing population with a police state mentality.
Although it has long abandoned the regulation of economic activities,
Beijing has tightened its family planning regime and,
under the current five-year plan, aims to keep the population
below 1.37 billion by 2010.
The one child policy does not apply equally to all families.
The wealthy elite, party bureaucrats and emerging urban middle
class have no difficulty in paying what for them are relatively
small fines to have extra children. For the urban and rural poor,
a second pregnancy carries the prospect of financially crippling
penalties.
It is little wonder that the policy has produced widespread
resentment and erupted in violent protests.
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