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China

‘Two-child policy’ town shows scope for reform

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A woman holds one of her grandchildren in their home in Chengde, Hebei province, a town where inhabitants are not bound by the one-child birth-control policy enforced in other parts of China. Photo: AFP
A few places in China give parents a rare right to have two offspring rather than one, but many stop at a single child anyway – fuelling demands to end what critics call an unnecessary, harmful rule.
Lu Xuiyan. Photo: AFP
Lu Xuiyan. Photo: AFP

“If you have too many kids then it becomes difficult,” said Lu Xiuyan, a 42-year-old restaurant manager in Jiashan, a dusty village of low-slung buildings a few hours north-east of Beijing, who has one son.

“But if you have fewer kids, you have less of a burden and you’ll be a little better off.”

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The national one-child policy was imposed more than 30 years ago, with enforcers relying on permits, fines and sometimes late-term abortions. Opponents say it has led to widespread rights abuses and major demographic imbalances.

Self-imposed birth limits in places such as Chengde district, which includes Jiashan, show the policy is not even required for population control, they say.

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China’s family planning commission, whose hundreds of thousands of personnel ensure the rules are followed, was merged with the health ministry at the country’s annual parliament meeting earlier this month.

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