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China via Shutterstock

China eases its one-child policy and abolishes labour camps

China argues its one-child limit kept population growth in check and supported the country’s rapid development that has seen it soar from mass poverty to become the world’s second-largest economy.

CHINA’S TOP LEGISLATIVE committee formally approved a loosening of the country’s hugely controversial one-child policy today.

It also abolished “re-education through labour” camps, state media reported.

The decisions were taken by the standing committee of the National People’s Congress, China’s rubber-stamp parliament, at the conclusion of a six-day meeting, according to Xinhua news agency.

Reforms to the one-child policy will allow couples where either parent has no siblings to have two children, easing the strict family planning policy imposed more than three decades ago to prevent overpopulation in the world’s most populous nation.

Laojiao

The abolition of re-education through labour, known as “laojiao”, will see existing inmates freed, Xinhua reported.

“Their remaining terms will not be enforced any more,” it quoted the NPC resolution as saying.

China argues its one-child limit kept population growth in check and supported the country’s rapid development that has seen it soar from mass poverty to become the world’s second-largest economy.

Until now, the law has prohibited couples from having more than one child, although exceptions already existed for couples where both spouses were only children, as well as for ethnic minorities and rural couples whose first child was a girl.

But enforcement of the policy has at times been excessive. The public was outraged last year when photos circulated online of a woman forced to abort her baby seven months into her pregnancy.

Now China faces looming demographic challenges, including a rapidly increasing elderly population, a shrinking labour force and male-female imbalances.

More boys than girls

China’s sex ratio has risen to 115 boys for every 100 girls, while the working population began to drop last year, Xinhua said earlier.

The birth rate has fallen to about 1.5 since the 1990s, well below the replacement rate, it added.

While the easing of the one-child policy – estimated to apply to around 10 million couples – has been welcomed, critics say that the state has retained the principle of deciding itself how many children people should have.

A dark chapter of China’s recent history

Provincial congresses and their standing committees will decide on implementing the new policy “based on evaluation of local demographic situation and in line with the law on population and family planning as well as this resolution,” Xinhua said, citing the resolution document.

The one-child policy reforms are expected to come into force in the first quarter of 2014, according to a senior official from the National Health and Family Planning Commission.

The approval to end the labour camps, introduced more than half a century ago, closes the curtain on a dark aspect of the country’s modern history long criticised by human rights groups and which Chinese authorities admit is no longer viable.

China began re-education through labour in 1957 as a speedy way to handle petty offenders. But the system – which allows a police panel to issue sentences of up to four years without trial – soon became rife with abuse.

State media have cited the development of China’s legal system as making the camps “superfluous”, with their “historical mission” having come to an end.

A UN report published in 2009 estimated that 190,000 people were held in the camps.

But campaigners have questioned whether the move to shutter the camps is simply a cosmetic change and are closely watching whether they are substituted with new forms of control.

The decisions came just days after the standing committee had expressed support for them and following promises by the ruling Communist Party at its Third Plenum meeting last month. Legislative approval was formally required to put them into effect.

The Third Plenum meeting has historically been an occasion for the ruling party to expand reforms, and was the first such gathering since Xi Jinping took over as head of the party in November last year as part of a once-a-decade change in power.

The party also pledged at the meeting to reduce the scope of the death penalty “step by step” – China is the world’s biggest judicial executioner – accelerate reforms to the household registration system and loosen controls on the economy by giving markets a “decisive” role in the allocation of resources.

- © AFP 2013

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    Mute Morticia
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    Jul 11th 2013, 10:32 AM

    Poor man, they are lookin for a scapegoat.

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    Mute David O'Sullivan
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    Jul 11th 2013, 10:47 AM

    If he failed to do his job properly, he deserves it.

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    Mute Paddy
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    Jul 11th 2013, 11:19 AM

    Sometimes it’s easy to forget to do things in your job. I know the hand brake is a basic responsibility. I do feel sorry for him as we’ll as all the people who died and their families. Rip

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    Mute David O'Sullivan
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    Jul 11th 2013, 11:30 AM

    Your first job as an engineer is to retire without killing anybody.

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    Mute Morticia
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    Jul 11th 2013, 12:09 PM

    How many people meddled with the train during the FIRST fire which happened AFTER it was parked up and the engineer had gone to his hotel?

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    Mute Mjhint
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    Jul 11th 2013, 2:24 PM

    Yes I understand this engineer may have been wrong so he will suffer the wrath of the legal system. I am a truck driver & if i have a fatal accident im the first to be investigated as there is more evivdence to be had from trucks about their speed driving time or whatever. Just like this engineer if there is something not right even if it has no bearing on the accident its off to jail. Unless your in that position you cannot comment on wether it is the correct outcome. They need a scapegoat your the only one in line so your f##ked. I have a friend that refused to drive a defective vehicle last week. Hes unemployed now as they found someone that did.

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    Mute Victor Ajani
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    Jul 11th 2013, 5:03 PM

    I live in Quebec far from that tragedy, it really was an inferno. For those who haven’t seen what it looked like, check this eye witness video http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/montreal/story/2013/07/09/quebec-lac-megantic-eyewitness-video.html

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    Mute gerard carey
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    Jul 11th 2013, 2:41 PM

    Get ur friend to sue that company, and name and shame them. Cowboys.

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    Mute Sarah O'Sullivan
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    Jul 11th 2013, 5:52 PM

    Living in Boston atm and I’m shocked at the lack of coverage this is receiving over here. Absolutely horrific event all round. It’s so strange people aren’t talking about it over here

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    Mute Lisa O'Reilly
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    Jul 12th 2013, 5:26 AM

    Travyon Martin is much more important to the vultures, not to mention it’s a US rail Co and therefore that’s too sensitive right now… Lastly, it happened in Canada (Where, hey…?) so who cares here…

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    Mute Lorelei Cleaning
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    Jul 11th 2013, 12:40 PM

    If I understand correctly it rolled 7 Kms was there no way of blocking, derailing it. Would till have gone up in flames, but at least not in a populated area?

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    Mute Paddy
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    Jul 11th 2013, 2:20 PM

    I doubt it ….7kms isn’t far really, very hard to try get a plan in place in such a short length of time. Not sure how fast if was travelling but assuming it was going pretty damn fast to derail it would have done the 7km in less than 5 minutes.

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    Mute Declan Noonan
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    Jul 11th 2013, 5:27 PM

    No one was aware that it was a runaway train. The drivers had gone off to their hotel for the night. To other people it was just a train running along the tracks.

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