China promises rights
to citizens born in violation of one-child policy
About 13 million people will be permitted to register for
‘hukou’, documents allowing access to education and healthcare long denied to
them
A slogan in
Hebei province calls on residents to ‘pay attention to one-child policy’. China
says it will now allow millions born in violation of that policy to get
official documents. Photograph: China Stringer Network/Reuters
Agence
France-Presse in Beijing
Thursday 10 December 2015 05.15 GMTLast modified
on Thursday
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China will allow
millions of unregistered citizens – many of them children born in violation of
the one-child policy – to obtain documents vital to secure education and health
services long denied to them, state media reported.
China reforms hukou
system to improve migrant workers' rights
An estimated
13 million Chinese, or 1% of the country’s total population, do not have proper household registration
permits, or “hukou”.
Some of them
are orphans, but many more are people born in violation of the highly controversial “one-child
policy”, which restricted most couples to only one offspring, and
barred any extra from being registered unless their parents paid a hefty fine,
which many could not afford.
Known as
“black children”, they are unable to go to school or obtain formal employment,
and often have problems travelling, among other difficulties.
The policy’s
replacement with a two-child rule for all was announced in October,
and the government promised to “fully resolve the hukou registration problem
for unregistered people” at a meeting chaired by president Xi Jinping on
Wednesday, according to a statement released by the official Xinhua news
agency.
Call for China to free labour
activists or risk backlash from frustrated workforce
“It is a
basic legal right for citizens to lawfully register for hukou,” the statement
said. “It is also a premise for citizens to participate in social affairs,
enjoy rights and fulfil duties.
“We will
deal with and protect every citizen’s rights to permanent hukou registration
according to the law,” it added.
Enforcement
of the family planning policy has always varied across China, and a few local
authorities have already said they will start granting hukou to people whose
parents have not paid the fines.
But the new
policy will still have to be implemented area by area, and some families have
previously complained that no changes have been made “on the ground” no matter
what reforms were promised by higher officials.
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