Girl sold herself for mom: Dilemma of Internet charity (Southern Metropolis Daily/zonaeu) Updated: 2005-11-07 09:39 After the Chen Yi incident, Yi Lianggan had some reflections. He said that he
wished that there was organization that would monitor civilian donations and
publish the accounts regularly. If everything were transparently made public,
the principals would be hurt in this manner.
The reality is the civilian charitable organizations are weak. At the end of
2004, the Chinese charitable organizations received 5 billion yuan, which is
equivalent to 0.05% of the 2004 GDP. The comparable figure is 2.17% in the
United States, 0.88% in the United Kingdom and 0.77% in Canada.
When Bafenzhai participated in Internet assistance campaigns, he found out
that many detailed problems could not be solved. For example, what happened if
the recipient got more in donations than actually spent even as others did not
get enough. Between the donors and recipients, there is no intermediary
organization that served as a reservoir to direct the donations to the most
needy persons. Thus, he wanted to establish a nationally recognized charitable
organization to help many more people.
He consulted the law and found out that charitable acts are governed legally
by the "The Public Interest Business Donations Laws," which refers solely to
"public interest society groups" receiving donations. It is impossible for
private citizens to establish such an organization. Bafenzhai believes that the
absence of charitable organizations caused the Chen Yi tragedy, and Yi Liangwei
was a victim because of the lack of a system of charitable organizations.
Also, Bafenzhai mentioned that even the quasi-official charitable
organizations are not being adequately monitored. The most typical case is the
Youth Foundation transferring the Project Hope donations to make investments.
Apart from setting up laws and tax exemptions to nurture charitable
organizations in China, there ought to be a system to monitor charitable
organizations.
The United States has a regulated system for overseeing charitable
organizations. The non-government organization National Charity Information
Bureau set the standards for charitable organizations. They will evaluate every
two to four years and the results are disclosed to the public through the media.
The charitable organizations are therefore very transparent and every citizen
can check the accounts. This type of monitoring system has proven to be highly
effective. In the United States, charity has become a part of popular culture.
Bafenzhai said that the netizens are very pure and kind-hearted. In order to
encourage this kind-heartedness and protect the fragile trust, there has to be
mature civilian charitable organizations with effective monitoring. Everything
that he is doing is intended to direct Chinese civilian charity towards
regularization. "As long as you disclose the information truthfully and you face
the public honestly, the enthusiasm of the netizens will continue to rise
higher," said Bafenzhai.
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