Why is filmmaker treated partially?
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Director sued over family planning breach |
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Director's paternity sparks debate |
China to grill Zhang Yimou's agent |
At first, one might take the incident just as gossip material for tabloids, but a deeper look would reveal that the matter concerns social justice. Family planning department officials are often known to deal with couples violating the regulation with an iron hand, more so if they happen to be rural residents.
But in the case of Zhang, no action has been taken even six months after a media outlet reported that the director might have broken the family planning regulation by having more than one child. When the matter was reported to the family planning agency in Wuxi, Zhang's home province of Jiangsu, the officials responded by saying they were "unable" to find the director.
Does the lame excuse suggest they are enforcing the family planning regulation selectively? Everyone in this age of information knows how absurd it sounds when some officials say they are "unable" to locate a celebrity. Reacting strongly to the Wuxi officials' response, many media outlets launched a "mission" to find Zhang by publishing reports on his whereabouts, with one newspaper even publishing a "wanted" notice on its front page.
The reports, combined with the open letter from Zhang's studio, revealed another detail of the incident: all of Zhang's three children have got hukou (household registration). According to the general practice of house registration, a couple have to submit copies of their marriage certificate and "birth permit" to get hukou for their newborn. Zhang couldn't have possibly had both papers. So how did he get hukou for all his three children?
In contrast to the way Zhang got hukou for his children, a 13-year-old girl reportedly attempted suicide in Wenling, Zhejiang province, in August because she had no hukou and thus could not go to school. She is just one of the many underprivileged children who don't enjoy any civic rights because they cannot have a hukou for want of legal documents. Although there are no accurate data on such children, experts and investigators estimate their number to be in millions.