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ahojunk

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I start this thread to share interesting news from China which is shunned or not reported in the wider western media.

Trolls are NOT welcome.

Only post if you have something meaningful to share.

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Tibetans mark Serfs' Emancipation Day
- Xinhua | English.news.cn


Tibetans mark Serfs' Emancipation Day
English.news.cn 2015-03-28 19:47:41

LHASA, March 28 (Xinhua) -- Celebrations of the seventh Serfs' Emancipation Day were held in southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region Saturday.


Some 3,000 people gathered at Potala Palace Square in the regional capital of Lhasa Saturday morning to watch a national flag raising ceremony.

In 2009, the regional legislature established March 28 as a day to commemorate Tibetan democracy, which ended the feudal serf system in 1959, freeing 1 million serfs; 90 percent of the region's population at that time.

Wearing a traditional woolen pulu coat, Cering Norbu, 80, a former serf who carried water for the feudal administration, traveled by public transport to attend the ceremony in the square.

Cering Norbu was a civil servant in the Lhasa environmental protection bureau after gaining his freedom in 1959.

"What tremendous changes have happened to me," said Tubdain, a retired official who was once a beggar in the street in Lhasa. He was sent to college in the 1970s and worked in the regional educational department.

Tibet's GDP increased to 92 billion yuan (15 billion U.S. dollars) last year from 174 million yuan (24 million U.S. dollars) in 1959. Per capita disposable income for rural residents in Tibet hit 7,359 yuan in 2014, with a double-digit growth for 12 consecutive years.

"Our life is getting better every year," said Cering Norbu, who moved to a new Tibetan-style house last year.

In a park behind the Potala Palace, locals and tourists surrounded a temporary stage to watch performances of dance, song and drama depicting Tibetan life since emancipation.

Tibet.Serf.Emancipation.Day1.jpg


Tibet.Serf.Emancipation.Day2.jpg


Tibet.Serf.Emancipation.Day3.jpg
 
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These were from last year, 2014.

Celebrations of 55th anniversary of Tibetan Serfs' Emancipation held in Tibet_Primary Education_Education_China Tibet Online

Celebrations of 55th anniversary of Tibetan Serfs' Emancipation held in Tibet
2014-03-28 13:29 CNTV Web Editor: Li Yan

Tibet.Serf.Emancipation.Day2014a.jpg

Photo taken on Mar.26th, 2014 shows Droma Lahm shares her stories with local students in Lhoka Prefecture of Tibet. [Photo/Xinhua]

Tibet.Serf.Emancipation.Day2014b.jpg

Photo taken on Mar.26th, 2014 shows local Tibetan students dance to celebrate the 55th anniversary of Tibetan Serfs' Emancipation in Lhoka Prefecture of Tibet. [Photo/Xinhua]

March 28, 2014 marks the 55th anniversary of Tibetan Serfs' Emancipation. Students from the Primary School of Gangtod Township celebrated the 55th anniversary of Tibetan Serfs' Emancipation with local resident Droma Lahm in Gongkar County, Lhoka Prefecture of Tibet, March 26, 2014.

Droma Lahm, 64, was a serf in old Tibet and lived a miserable life.

On the occasion of the anniversary of Tibetan Serfs' Emancipation, she shared her old stories with local students and encouraged them to cherish today's happy life and study hard.

Tibetan legislators endorsed a bill on January 19, 2009 to designate March 28 as an annual Serfs Emancipation Day, to mark the date on which about 1 million serfs in the region were freed 55 years ago. At that time, 95 percent of people in Tibet were serfs.


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Apparently, this event has been celebrated in the last few years. I have never heard of this celebration. Just wasn't reported in the western media.

This one is from 2013.

Tibetans mark emancipation of serfs - Headlines, features, photo and videos from ecns.cn

Tibetans mark emancipation of serfs
2013-03-29 08:59 China Daily Web Editor: Wang YuXia

Tibet.Serf.Emancipation.Day2013.jpg

Farmers dance on the street in Lhasa, capital of the Tibet autonomous region, on Thursday to celebrate the Serfs Emancipation Day.JOGOD / XINHUA

A flag-raising ceremony was held on Thursday morning in Lhasa, capital of the Tibet autonomous region, to mark the 54th anniversary of the abolition of feudal serfdom.

Some 3,000 people watched the ceremony at the square in front of the Potala Palace following a week of celebratory activities including dancing, singing and Tibetan opera.

Thursday marks the fifth Serfs Emancipation Day. In January 2009, Tibet's lawmakers designated March 28 as a memorial day for the 1959 democratic reform in Tibet.

The reform ended the era of feudal serfdom and freed about 1 million serfs and slaves, who at the time accounted for more than 95 percent of the region's population.

Tsering Phel, 72, of Damxung county on the outskirts of Lhasa, was born a serf. She said she remembers the eight serf families in her hometown used to suffer from hunger, cold and bullying by slave owners.

"After the reform, our fate changed," she said. "There are no more serfs. Women and men have equal status."

She said it was the fifth time she had attended the national flag-raising ceremony.

"By watching the ceremony, I want to show my support and gratitude. I also taught my children and grandchildren to be grateful for their comfortable lives today," she said.

Kunsang, 63, a retired soldier in Lhasa who also attended the ceremony, said his parents used to be serfs and his childhood years were dominated by hunger and poverty.

"The bygone hardships are unimaginable today," he said. "With favorable policies from the central government, retirees like me are taken care of, with basic living necessities and healthcare guaranteed."

Bandetso, 14, is a junior high school student in Lhasa. It was the second time that she came to the flag-raising ceremony.

"My parents told me our life today was hard-earned. I am glad to be in the crowd to commemorate this occasion," she said.

Bandetso said her family welcomed the policy in Tibet that waived tuition fees for students before college.

"It eases my parents' burdens. I don't have to worry if my family can't afford my education," she said.

Dradul, a monk from Tsurphu Monastery in Doilungdeqen, another county in suburban Lhasa, said monks and nuns in Tibet enjoy improved living conditions, as electricity, running water and medical insurance have been offered to them.

Dradul made the remarks at a forum in Lhasa on Thursday.

In recent years, monks and nuns have been given higher representation and greater influence in the political arena, occupying more seats at legislative and political advisory bodies in regional, prefecture and county-level governments, he said.

Tibet saw its gross domestic product soar to 69.56 billion yuan ($11.19 billion) in 2012, more than 100 times that of 1959. The region's economy has maintained double-digit growth for 20 years, Losang Jamcan, chairman of the Tibet regional government, said in a televised speech on Wednesday.

Some 88 percent of the farmers and herdsmen have moved to new houses with better conditions. Their per capita net income reached 5,719 yuan. They have fewer worries about children's education costs, as Tibet is the first provincial level administrative region in China to provide 15 years' education free of tuition fees, Losang Jamcan said.

People's average life expectancy in Tibet rose from 35.5 years in 1959 to 71 years. Tibet has a universal healthcare system based on free medical services that have cost more than 2 billion yuan over the past 10 years. A strong emphasis is placed on environmental protection in Tibet, which is home to 47 natural reserves and 21 ecological conservation areas, which account for 34.5 percent of Tibet's area, the highest ratio in China, Losang Jamcan said.

He said further efforts will be made to strengthen the competitiveness of agriculture and animal husbandry, improve people's livelihoods and public services in Tibet, and maintain social stability and national sovereignty.
 
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For former serfs, it is indeed a meaningful holiday, land, house, education and sanitation for former slaves and their children who would have been slaves before. But for those slave owners and monks who should have protected their followers, it was another day.
屏幕快照 2015-03-29 12.30.16.png
屏幕快照 2015-03-29 12.29.52.png
屏幕快照 2015-03-29 12.32.04.png
 
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I have even managed to locate a video. This is getting more interesting.


Tibetan "Serfs Emancipation Day"
Uploaded in 19 January 2009

My notes:-
Three classes of serfs or slaves in Old Tibet:-
  • Tralpa, about 60 - 70% of serfs, till plots of land, provide unpaid labour.
  • Duiqoin, about 30 - 40% lower social class, harder life, no land or personal freedom, dependent on estate owners.
  • Nanzan, the remainder up to 10%, who are hereditary household slaves, called "livestock that can talk", bottom rung of society, owners treated them as private property, can be traded, given as gifts or use them for debts.
 
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China should publish more truth like this in English and invite the wersterners to visit tibet. It will help wersterners understand China.

The Western media has little interest in understanding China - it wants to bash China and try to stop it's rise.

Better that the average Westerners visit all parts of China and then can see for themselves that they are being fed a pack of lies by the media back home.
 
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:lol:
China should publish more truth like this in English and invite the wersterners to visit tibet. It will help wersterners understand China.
No, western media need to report fake and negative China news in order to survive an make money. If they did not, they would go broke. That will put a lot of Jews and white people out of a high paying job.
That would consider anti-semetics
 
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Chinese villagers write to Dutch PM for return of mummified buddha

Chinese villagers write to Dutch PM for return of mummified buddha
2015-03-30 09:32 Xinhua Web Editor: Gu Liping

Mummified.Buddha1.jpg

The mummified Buddha statue is in possession of a Dutch private collector. [Photo: CNTV]

Hundreds of villagers in an east China county have written a letter to Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte, hoping for the return of a 1,000-year-old mummified buddha believed to be stolen from their village in 1995.

The statue, which contains a mummified monk, was on a "Mummy World" exhibition at the Hungarian Natural History Museum that opened in October last year and was originally scheduled to be on display until May 17, but was pulled from the exhibition last week following allegations that it was stolen from a Fujian village.

The letter, jointly written by the local residents of Datian County in Fujian Province and overseas Chinese associations, has been handed to European Chinese societies and is expected to be delivered to the Netherlands via the Chinese embassy there.

"We believe that the Buddha is the one that we have been searching for in the past 20 years, and we are looking forward to its return," read the letter, in both Chinese and English.

Fujian's Cultural Relics Bureau said last week that judging from research and media reports, experts have confirmed that the statue was a relic stolen from Yangchun Village in 1995.

"[The Buddha] is our God and we have faith in him for hundreds of years. He has become an important part of our life, and we hope that it will be returned soon," read the letter.

The Dutch private collector who is in possession of the statue was quoted by Dutch daily NRC on Thursday that he is willing to give it back to the Chinese village if it is proved to be stolen from there.

According to Yangchun archives, the Buddha, named Zhanggong Zushi, was a local man who became a monk in his 20s and won fame for helping people treat disease and spread Buddhist belief. When he died at the age of 37, his body was mummified and local people made a statue with the mummy inside at around the time in China's Song Dynasty (960-1279). The statue has been worshipped in the village temple ever since.

In the temple, local people still preserve the statue's hat and clothes and other affiliated relics.

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Villagers request the return of mummified buddha statue

Villagers request the return of mummified buddha statue
2015-03-27 14:32 CRIENGLISH.com Web Editor: Gu Liping

Mummified.Buddha2.jpg

The signatures and finger prints of villagers from Yangchun Village, southeast China's Fujian Province, requesting the return of their lost Mummified Buddha statue. [Photo: CNTV]

Villagers from Yangchun Village, southeast China's Fujian Province, have written a letter to the Prime Minister of the Netherlands, Mark Rutte, requesting the return of their lost mummified Buddha statue.

The statue, which was on display in Hungary, is now in possession of a Dutch private collector.

The villagers maintain that the statue containing the mummified remains of a Buddhist monk stolen from their village in 1995.

According to the Cultural Relic Bureau in Fujian, experts have also confirmed that the mummified Buddha statue was a relic stolen from the village.
 
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Slowly , most European news will be favorable of Chinese. The shift to east is coming. Only the Yankees will still continue post anti China rubbish.
 
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Slowly , most European news will be favorable of Chinese. The shift to east is coming. Only the Yankees will still continue post anti China rubbish.
That is bad news in some sense. Many China bashers (writers) will be out of work, and I hope we don't become complacent if that ever happen.
 
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The following news were under-reported in western media or was spin to be mostly negative.

The following are links to the evacuation of foreign nationals by China.

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China helps 10 countries evacuate nationals from Yemen - Xinhua | English.news.cn

After China has evacuated its own 571 Chinese nationals, China then helped 10 countries to evacuate 225 nationals in conflict-ridden Yemen on Thursday.

During its evacuation of Chinese nationals, its warships also evacuated 8 foreigners from Romania, India and Egypt who were working for Chinese companies.

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200 Pakistan nationals evacuated from Yemen by Chinese fleet

200 Pakistan nationals evacuated from Yemen by Chinese fleet.

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Yemen evacuation demonstrates China’s growing far-seas naval capabilities - AEI | Foreign and Defense Policy Blog » AEIdeas
Yemen evacuation demonstrates China’s growing far-seas naval capabilities
Eddie Linczer
April 3, 2015 12:09 pm | AEIdeas

On Sunday, March 29, the Chinese PLA Navy (PLAN) evacuated 570 Chinese citizens from two port cities in Yemen. Then on Thursday, April 2, the PLAN force returned to evacuate 225 foreign nationals. All evacuees were transported to Djibouti, where they await flights home. These PLAN operations are noteworthy for being only the Chinese military’s second and third non-combatant evacuation operations (NEO) – PLA assets also assisted in evacuating 35,000 Chinese citizens out of Libya in March 2011. The Wall Street Journal described the Yemen mission as a sign of China’s growing naval capabilities in the region. What precisely are those capabilities? Do these operations signal an expansion of Chinese military involvement in the Middle East?

The PLAN frigates that carried out the Yemen evacuations were already forward deployed as part of an anti-piracy task force. Since 2009, China has conducted anti-piracy operations off of the Horn of Africa. Nineteen task forces, generally consisting of a destroyer, frigate, and a supply ship, have rotated in three to four -month intervals. Recent Chinese task forces have also been accompanied by a Song-class submarine. Beijing undertook these missions to protect its vital energy shipping lanes—over half of China’s oil imports come from the Middle East.

China’s anti-piracy operations also provide excellent training opportunities for the PLAN. PRC task forces frequently conduct training exercises with their US, NATO, and Russian peers. PLAN vessels also conduct regular port visits to regional nations. Between 2008-2011, escort forces visited ports in 19 nations, including eight resupply visits to Salalah, Yemen.

The PLAN has openly discussed that these anti-piracy operations have forced it to confront logistical dilemmas such as keeping supplies fresh for extended deployments and repairing equipment at sea. China is learning the basics of how to operate a blue-water navy far from home.

The Yemen operations demonstrate the latent capability of China’s anti-piracy task force to conduct rapid non-combatant evacuation operations (NEOs). As the PRC’s military capabilities have matured, its citizens increasingly expect government assistance in evacuating them from war zones. These NEOs demonstrate that the Chinese government will assist its citizens in need. China’s second operation to rescue foreign national’s from Aden represents an enormous PR boost for Beijing, as it attempts to portray itself as a responsible contributor to international peace and security.

China’s NEOs in Libya and Yemen have involved intense logistical coordination between the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the PLA. These operations, however, did not require China to deploy forces ashore to provide safe transit for evacuees. In the future, how far will Beijing be willing to go in order to protect its own? Each PLAN anti-piracy task-force carries a detachment of Marine Corps Special Operations Forces onboard. While deployed, these troops practice helicopter infil/exfil missions and hostage rescues. China currently lacks the forward deployed intelligence capabilities to plan and execute “SEAL Team 6”-esque hostage rescue operations in the Middle East, but as its far-seas military capabilities mature and as its overseas interests expand, expect Beijing to face domestic pressure to expand its mission set.

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Some selected pictures:-

Yemen.Evacuation01.jpg

These two lucky foreigners were among the first batch evacuated together with the 571 Chinese nationals because they worked for Chinese companies in Yemen.

Yemen.Evacuation02.jpg

They are served meals on board the Chinese ship.

Yemen.Evacuation03.jpg

Foreigners evacuated by China, probably Pakistanis.

Yemen.Evacuation04.jpg

Foreigners evacuated by China.

Yemen.Evacuation05.jpg

Foreigners being checked by Chinese medical staff.

Yemen.Evacuation06.jpg

These Chinese soldiers have to sleep on the floor. Their bunk beds were given to the evacuees. :lol:
But it is all for a good cause. As soldiers, it's their honour to serve.

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China Helps Evacuate 225 Nationals of 10 Countries from Yemen

A video that shows the gratitude of a mother. A touching moment when she asked her little daughter to kiss a Chinese soldier. This is towards the end of the video. I am touched, moments like this is priceless.
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Russia is also helping to evacuate other foreign nationals too.

Poland thanks Russia, China for help in Yemen evacuation - Thenews.pl :: News from Poland

Poland thanks Russia, China for help in Yemen evacuation
03.04.2015 15:13

poland.foreign.minister.jpg


Foreign Minister Grzegorz Schetyna thanks the governments of China and Russia, which helped in the evacuation.

“The situation is under control, we have information that for now everything is going well,” he said.

Russia air lifted 20 Polish citizens from the capital of Yemen, Sana’a to Moscow on board two aircraft, while the Chinese navy took four Polish citizens across a narrow strait from Aden to Djibuti.

Yemen has recently been invaded by a Saudi-led coalition set up to dislodge the Shia Houthis who have taken over the capital city.

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India is also helping to evacuate Sri Lankans and Bangladeshis.

India to help in evacuating Sri Lankans from Yemen - The Times of India

India to help government rescue stranded Bangladeshis from trouble-hit Yemen -
bdnews24.com
 
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This is a good idea, China should have done this earlier.
Anyway, it's better late than never
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China to blacklist poorly-behaved tourists

China to blacklist poorly-behaved tourists
2015-04-12 09:06 Xinhua Editor: Si Huan

China is starting to blacklist poorly-behaved tourists as it seeks to rescue the image of its citizens as holidaymakers.

According to a regulation by the China National Tourism Administration (NTA) that entered effect this week, tourists will be blacklisted for offences including acting antisocially on public transport, damaging private or public property, disrespecting local customs, sabotaging historical exhibits or engaging in gambling or pornographic activities.

Records will be kept in a two-tired system: provincial-level tourism authorities are responsible for cases under their jurisdiction while the NTA will be in charge of a nationwide register.

People will be blacklisted for two years after they offend, according to the regulation

The NTA said tourism authorities will inform blacklisted tourists and "propose correction measures in order to mitigate the negative impact".

It also said that tourism authorities reserve the right to report such violations to public security, customs and transport authorities as well as the central bank's individual credit department.

The regulation comes amid growing concern about the ill manners of Chinese tourists both at home and abroad.

In 2013, a Chinese tourist wrote his name on a relief carving in Luxor, Egypt. In December, a Chinese passenger threw a cup of hot instant noodles at a flight attendant on an international flight. Chinese tourists have been fined or jailed for carrying prohibited items or purchasing wild animal products.

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System targets Chinese tourists' behavior

System targets Chinese tourists' behavior
2015-04-07 09:24 China Daily Editor: Si Huan

A new measure has been introduced aimed at ending inappropriate behavior by Chinese tourists.

According to the China National Tourism Administration, such behavior includes violating order on public transportation-including flights-damaging public facilities or historical relics, ignoring social customs at tourism destinations, and becoming involved with gambling or prostitution.

Records will be kept by provincial and national tourism authorities for up to two years, starting from the day the misbehavior was confirmed by tourism authorities.

If necessary, they will also be handed to public security, customs, frontier inspection, transportation and banking authorities. Tourists are allowed to appeal.

The move follows incidents involving Chinese tourists that triggered controversy.

During the three-day Tomb Sweeping holiday, three Chinese tourists were arrested in Japan for alleged sexual harassment. Under local law, one of them who allegedly used a mobile phone to take upskirt photos could face one year in prison or a fine of 1 million yen ($8,300).

In December, a flight from Bangkok to Nanjing was forced to turn back about 90 minutes after takeoff because two Chinese passengers created a disturbance.

Zhang Hui, who works for a multinational company in Shanghai, said misbehavior by Chinese tourists had blunted her desire to travel.

"I never make trips during public holidays because I can imagine the chaos, the garbage ..., the commotion in places that should be peaceful, and disturbances caused on trains or flights," Zhang said.

"However, I'm not sure whether this new measure will work, just like no-smoking signs in public areas. And I'm still not clear how the behavior of Chinese tourists will be supervised worldwide."

Zhang Lingyun, deputy dean of the tourism college at Beijing Union University, has kept a close watch on the issue since the flight from Bangkok had to turn back. He said he can understand the motivation behind the new measure, but still doubts if it will be effective.

"It will be very difficult to operate. Take obtaining evidence, for example. Behavior that breaches the law won't be too difficult to define, but cases that involve morals will be," Zhang said.

"Some forms of misbehavior listed in the new measure are already banned under other laws. For example, historical relics are protected by the Cultural Relics Protection Law.

"I think we don't need another measure in this area. Cases involving morals can only be resolved through education and with proper guidance.

"Personal records should be dealt with carefully without violating personal privacy."
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Their names should be shown at the airport customs with their passport photos. No privacy for them.
 
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If you are a Chinese bachelor thinking of getting married, the following news is not encouraging.

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Tea Leaf Nation
Ukrainian Brides May Solve China’s Gender Gap, Chinese Media Claims
The 34 million extra men pose serious social risks, but some just see a matchmaking bonanza.

By Alexa Olesen
January 28, 2015

Ukrainian.Bride.Chinese.men.jpg

Chinese men enjoying the scenery in Shanghai, but not a single Chinese women in sight!

“Their economy is depressed but beautiful women are running rampant,” the state-run Beijing News reported Jan. 22 in a story suggesting that Ukrainian women could be the solution to China’s woman shortage. The piece, illustrated with charts, bubbles, and cartoon illustrations of lonely Chinese men, was a breezy attempt to make light of China’s missing women and the severe gender imbalance caused by couples aborting female fetuses in favor of boys. So widespread is the practice that it has badly skewed the country’s sex ratio: The global average is around 105 boys born for every 100 girls; but in China last year, just over 115 boys were born for every 100 girls.

The problem has been brewing since sonogram technology was introduced to China in the 1980s, allowing families to determine a baby’s gender during the first few months of pregnancy. Combined with the country’s restrictive family-planning policies — until recently, most urban families were only allowed a single child in order to curtail population growth — and a traditional preference for sons, the newfound ability to practice sex-selective abortion has resulted in one of the world’s highest gender imbalances. The topic flared anew in the public mind after the National Bureau of Statistics announced the latest population figures on Jan. 20, noting that at the end of 2014 China had 701 million men and 667 million women, a shortfall of nearly 34 million women. The bureau didn’t provide a breakdown, but previous research shows that most of China’s missing women are among those born since 1985.

To address the problem, China has resorted to propaganda campaigns extolling the virtues of daughters and offering cash incentives for couples who have them. These measures have spurred more female births, but not enough — China’s gender imbalance is still “the most serious in the world and has lasted for the longest time and affected the largest number of people,” China’s National Health and Family Planning Commission said in a Jan. 21 statement.

Rather than dwelling on the fact that sex-selective abortions continue despite a government ban, Chinese media interpreted the sex ratio as a threat to men, not women. On Jan. 21, web giant Sina’s arm in Henan, China’s most populous province, wondered aloud on social media platform Weibo whether the news was “heart-stopping” and exhorted bachelors to “start making an effort!” Meanwhile, a Beijing statistician sharing the latest figures to his Weibo account wrote, “Tomorrow I am going to get my son to hurry up and find a girlfriend at his elementary school.” Beijing News even suggested that Ukrainian women could be a solution to China’s problem. The story kicked off with a question: “Just how hard is it for a diaosi,” slang for young bachelors of modest means, “to find a wife?” After explaining the severe imbalance that the ratio represents, it added that Chinese brides are a popular “export” to many countries such as Japan, South Korea, and the United States, a trend it said had depleted China’s supply of eligible women still further. It offered a chart of the best destinations around the globe for Chinese men to find spouses. Japan and South Korea were particularly promising, the paper said, claiming that 26 percent of South Korean women who took foreign spouses in 2012 chose Chinese men. The trend is bound to grow, the argument went, since popular Korean television actress Park Chae-rim married her Chinese actor beau, Gao Ziqi, in September 2014.

Lighthearted joking filled the comments section, with most ignoring the underlying factors leading to the bachelor oversupply. Some netizens viewed the gender imbalance as a boon for the gay community, others as a useful pressure valve for those who aren’t interested in marriage anyway. There are, in other words, plenty of fish in the sea, at least outside China.

Therese Hesketh, a professor of global health at University College London, told Foreign Policy via email from eastern China’s Zhejiang province that many ordinary Chinese believe that “aborting a girl is simply a choice made by a couple — and they are entitled to this.” Hesketh said that when she lectures in China, many audience members “seem to just accept selective abortions,” and she has students who admit they would abort female fetuses in favor of a boy. She added that many students attribute this stance to parental pressure.

China is not alone in these cultural predilections. Indian social scientist Ravinder Kaur wrote in an August 2013 paper that “the common response” in both China and India “when the connection between sex selection and bride shortage is pointed out is that rather than allow daughters to be born, they would resort to importing brides.” Kaur also wrote that bride shortages in China and India can lead to “kidnap marriage,” which includes “deception and enticement” and “luring women for marriage into high sex ratio areas.”

For its part, the Chinese government is still campaigning against sex-selective abortions. Following the release of the latest statistics, the National Health and Family Planning Commission revealed details of its latest initiative to curb sex-selective abortion: harsher penalties for agencies and individuals who send blood samples from expectant mothers abroad for testing to determine the gender of the woman’s fetus. Clinics and hospitals in China can perform sonograms on expectant mothers, but are barred from revealing the gender of the baby, a restriction that has given rise to black market sonogram testing (including providers who perform the exam in the back seat of a woman’s car). Chinese agencies that offer to come to a woman’s home will draw blood, pack it in dry ice, and then mail or carry the sample across the border to Hong Kong or elsewhere for testing at hospitals. The commission has promised severe punishments for anyone caught in the act. But that hardly seems like enough to solve the underlying problem, any more than Ukrainian brides.
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This story is a little dated, but related to the previous post...

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Steady supply of wives
By Liang Chen Source:Global Times Published: 2013-9-26 20:33:01

937a2efa-0ce0-4162-aa26-5da3352b9e73.jpeg

A Vietnamese woman who was "sold" as a wife in Luoding, Guangdong Province. Women from Southeast Asia are increasingly popular as wives in China's rural areas. Photo: CFP

Chen Dewu (pseudonym), a villager in Zhangwan town, under the administration of Ningde, Fujian Province, never imagined he would marry a Myanmar woman.

Six years ago, he drowned his sorrow in wine as he couldn't find a woman to marry. In rural areas, it is commonplace for the groom's family to offer a dowry, tens of thousands of yuan on average, to the bride's family. Poor Chen couldn't afford such a fee and thought he would be single for life.

However now, his Myanmese wife, slim and tanned, has brought two children into the world, a son and a daughter. The family celebrated Chen's 40th birthday just last month.

Chen is not alone in this situation. Many Chinese men have married women from neighboring countries in Southeast Asia, such as Myanmar, Vietnam and Laos. In these countries where the economy situation is often dire, the dowries are usually much smaller.

The cross-border marriages, mostly taking place in remote villages in Henan and Fujian provinces, have no legal effect. The couples have no marriage certificate and the brides don't have Chinese citizenship, due to the illegal nature of their stay here. Even worse, their offspring cannot get hukou (household registration), which means their children may struggle to enroll in school or find a job. Despite its illegitimacy and potential severe consequences, marrying a foreign woman is often the last resort for Chinese whose poor families cannot afford Chinese dowries. There is also the local reputation that brides from abroad are more loyal, can endure more hardship and work longer hours than Chinese women.

But the major issue is how they come to China. Some Myanmese brides were smuggled into China and married Chinese men willingly while others were conned into coming here on the promise of finding work.

According to the Myanmar Times, among 731 human trafficking court cases in Myanmar from January 2006 to August 2011, 585 of them were linked to China. Over the past six years, 80 percent of abducted women in Myanmar have been sold and married to Chinese men. Myanmar police have in total saved 780 Myanmar women from China in the past six years.

First to marry

Chen Dewu, the first man in his village to marry a Myanmese woman, still remembers how embarrassed he was when he turned 34 and still wasn't married.

He watched all his friends got married and had babies, while he never had a single chance at romance.

The eldest son in the family, he couldn't bear to spend his entire family savings of 30,000 yuan ($4,900) on tying the knot.

Six years ago, Chen decided to marry a Myanmese woman when one of his distant relatives from Yunnan suggested it.

Chen and one of his neighbors went to bordering towns and villages in Yunnan, which is a hub for human trafficking as it borders Myanmar, Laos and Vietnam.

Through the introduction of matchmakers, the two men sneaked into border villages. Chen visited dozens of villages before a girl caught his eyes.

"She looked beautiful, good-tempered and had big eyes," Chen recalled.

Thousands of kilometers away in Queshan county, Henan Province, a woman feeds pigs with a skill that belies a lifetime of farm experience. No-one could guess she hails from Myanmar.

Twenty years ago, Madan, who did heavy work on a relative's farm, had no idea that she would ever have any ties to China.

Like other Myanmar brides, Madan knew little about China besides kung fu.

However, in November 1994, when a middle-aged widower visited her hometown to look for a wife, Madan was convinced by his cousin to marry him. "He said I wouldn't have to do heavy farm work if I married a Chinese man, as China used machines and tools to replace the manpower," Madan said.

Madan cried every night for six months after she was brought into this strange village. Now, Madan's son is 20 and her husband works on a local factory, making a decent living.

Madan was fulfilled. "I don't need to worry about money. We can feed ourselves," she said.

At the very beginning, communication between the couple was paralyzed by the language barrier.

But as time has passed, most of these Myanmese wives gradually assimilated into Chinese culture. They picked up the language, learned to do farm work and made friends.

However, they all worry about the illegitimacy of their marriage and the consequences for their children.

"The hospital didn't give us a birth certificate when my child was born," another Myanmese wife in the village of Ningde, who asked not to be named, told the Global Times.

They live in an insecure environment and cannot travel outside of their villages most of the time. If they are ever caught, the law dictates they must be repatriated to their home country.

Coaxed into marriage

In Ningde, Fujian Province, several women were from Southeast Asia, coaxed into Yunnan Province under the pretext of promised jobs and then sold as wives.

Six years ago, several Myanmese women were lured into Nancheng village, Fujian Province, but Chen Linyu (pseudonym) is the only one still there.

She cried, resisted and fought at first when she was introduced to single Chinese men. However, she was threatened that if she continued, she would be abandoned to fend for herself. She eventually married a shopkeeper. She told The Beijing News that she kept thinking of running away but with nobody to help her and no money, she had no way of doing so.

This dilemma is commonplace for many Myanmese women. They miss their families back home but they have no way of getting there. Furthermore, they often stay for the sake of their children.

Being repatriated

Despite the law, it is difficult for the local police to repatriate these brides.

"It is normal that they always hide when we visited their families in China, for fear of being repatriated," Hu, an officer from the Exit and Entry Administration of Public Security Bureau in Xincai county, told the Global Times.

One day, a bride who was preparing food ran away instantly when he and his colleagues visited her home and tried to persuade her husband into sending her back to Myanmar, Hu recalled.

Local public security bureaus have launched campaigns to crack down on foreigners who try to enter, stay or work in China illegally. Foreign brides have become one of their prime targets.

In May, Hunan Provincial Public Security Bureau bought out two train compartments to send back over 30 Myanmar brides. Most of them looked calm but many cried, complaining that they were returning to a life of poverty, Hu recalled. The Henan authorities have repatriated at least three batches of Myanmese women since 2006 at their own cost.

Usually, local village officials are asked to accompany Myanmar brides to the border and hand them over to Myanmese police.

Local police have to put up with intense pressure. An old Chinese saying says that (people) would rather destroy a temple than break up marriages. The police are often besieged with villagers obstructing them from taking away the foreign brides.

"People say their marriages with Chinese men were consensual. They blame us for breaking up their families," Hu told the Global Times.

Hu said he was sympathetic toward the suffering of these families, but that there could be "no emotions involved in the law".

Hu also called on the governments of both sides to reach a consensus on how to solve the problem of their identities.

"Most of the brides who willingly married Chinese men don't want to go back to Myanmar, as they are emotionally attached to their Chinese families. But most of those who were abducted and married by coercion wish to return home," Chen Shiqu, director of the anti-human trafficking office at China's Ministry of Public Security, told Xinhua.

Myanmese women are smuggled into China by river or along back roads in remote mountainous areas, and the number is on the rise, Chen said in a previous interview.

Most Myanmese women brought here came from Mandalay and its surrounding areas. "These women's families are so poor that they can barely feed themselves. It is a good opportunity for them to improve their livelihood by marrying their daughters to Chinese men," said Zhong Zhixiang, a professor on People's Liberation Army of Foreign Languages.
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