County halts hukou denials after news report
Updated: 2014-05-20 07:41
By Sun Li in Fuzhou (China Daily)
|
||||||||
The Xiushui county government in Jiangxi province said it has halted a practice in which its family planning agency blocked the registrations of children whose parents had violated the family planning rules until fines were paid.
The county said on its micro blog on Monday that the authority has stopped demanding that fines be paid before the issuance of a household registration, or hukou, for a child.
"The registration of babies will be strictly in line with the national policy," it said.
The Beijing News reported that the county's family planning commission had a tacit agreement with the police that families who violated family planning rules must pay fines to the commission before the police would register the hukou.
For each fine, the police would get 200 yuan ($32) to 400 yuan, the report said.
The government said it has created a task force to investigate the matter.
Huang Yizhi, a Beijing-based lawyer, said the law requires registration offices to provide hukou for all Chinese citizens and not attach any preconditions.
"Linking the social support fee with hukou has no legal basis, and it will damage a person's fundamental rights, as hukou, which affords permanent residency status, entitles one to go to school, join the army, take an exam and get married," Huang said.
The country relaxed its family planning policy in November so that couples are allowed to have two children if one of the parents is an only child. Even so, most Chinese families can only have one child.
In Xiushui county, money paid to the public security bureaus by family planning offices in townships totaled more than 1 million yuan a year, the Beijing News reported.
Because she cannot afford the social maintenance fee, a resident of Bailing has been unable to register hukou for her two grandchildren, aged 1 and 2. Both are "extra" births. The mother and father are migrants who work in Guangdong province.
According to the provincial regulations related to family planning and the social support fee, the woman must pay about 30,000 yuan.
Social support fees in the county amount to more than 20 million yuan a year. Most of it will either be returned to village and township governments as rewards or kept by county family planning commission officials for their own expenses, the report said.
sunli@chinadaily.com.cn
- China hosts major Asia security conference
- Xi vows support for Afghanistan reconstruction
- Security summit to help build mutual trust
- Russian president arrives for state visit
- China suspends cyber working group activities with US to protest cyber theft indictment
- China publishes latest data of US cyber attack
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Long march to end employment bias |
Missing 'bracelet' sets safety alarm bells ringing |
Hidden dangers, ruined lives |
Meeting mummy in the valley of the giants |
The city that's not forbidden, just avoided |
Saying goodbye to a life of grime |
Today's Top News
China protests against US indictment
China protests cyber theft indictment
Jumei IPO 'milestone'
Chinese foreign minister meets UN chief in Shanghai
Garment workers win $1.2 m
Chicago students prep for China trip
AT&T agrees to buy DirecTV in $48.5B deal
Chinese investment bolsters EB-5 visa program
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |