As many as 1,968 officials in central China's Hunan Province
have been found breaching the nation's one-child policy between
2000 and 2005, the provincial family planning commission said
Friday.
Also exposed by the commission are 21 national and local
lawmakers, 24 political advisors, 112 entrepreneurs and six senior
intellectuals.
A national lawmaker identified by his surname as Li, were
keeping four mistresses, with whom he had four children, a
spokesman of the commission said.
Some officials who have had more than one child but had gone
their way unnoticed during their tenure of leadership were exposed
when they were investigated for corruption, he said.
"Three officials -- vice head of Tujia and Miao Autonomous
Prefecture of Xiangxi with the surname as Peng, vice mayor of Loudi
City surnamed as Zhao, and vice mayor of Chenzhou City with the
surname of Lei, who were all found to have kept extramarital
mistresses, -- were all convicted for charges such as embezzlement
and taking bribes, but they were not punished for having more than
child," said the spokesman.
To curb population growth, China's family planning policy was
enacted in the late 1970s to encourage late marriages and late
childbearing, and it limited most urban couples to one child and
most rural couples to two.
The policy is credited with preventing more than 400 million
births since it was introduced.
In Hunan, officials estimate 30 million births have been
prevented due to the policy. As the 7th most populous province in
China, the Hunan provincial government has vowed to keep its
population within 70.1 million by 2010.
The policy was upgraded to the Population and Family Planning
Law in December 2001 at the 25th session of the Ninth National
People's Congress, the country's top legislature, and the law came
into effect in September 2002.
However, there have been increasing reports of officials,
tycoons and entertainment stars having more than one child over
recent years, causing grave public concern.
"The fact that some localities which dare not give penalties in
case of violating one-child policy or choose to deal with such
cases leniently should be one of the main reasons for the trend,"
the Hunan commission spokesman said.
The Hunan provincial governor, Zhou Qiang, had in April ordered
local authorities to "expose the celebrities and high-income people
who violate the family planning policy and have more than one
child."
The move has also been adopted in east China's Zhejiang
Province, and in central China's Henan Province, the nation's most
populous region,officials belonging to the Communist Party of China
will be barred from promotion if they have more children than the
law allows.
Meanwhile, Hunan and Zhejiang have greatly raised the fines
imposed on violators of the one-child policy. In some cases, the
fine could be as high as over one million yuan (130,000 U.S.
dollars).
But heavy fines and exposures seemed to hardly stop the
celebrities and rich people, as there are still many people, who
can afford the heavy penalties, insist on having multiple kids, the
Hunan commission spokesman said.
It is a problem yet to be resolved in China, and population
experts have also proposed imposing moral denouncement on those
people and enhance supervision by public opinion.
(Xinhua News Agency July 9, 2007)