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Smith, Franks, Human Rights
Leaders Mark 30th Year of
Brutal 'One Child Policy' in China
Editor's note. The following
was provided by the office of House Pro-Life Caucus Chris Smith
(R-NJ). It begins with an overview of what transpired last
Friday and is followed by Cong. Smith's full remarks.
The brutality of China's "One Child
Policy" was painstakingly described by human rights leaders on
the eve of the 30th anniversary of the Chinese policy that has
led to forced and coerced sterilizations and abortions and has
led China to become the only country in the world with a higher
rate--three times higher--of female suicides than male suicides.
Over 500 women a day take their lives in China.
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Congressman Chris Smith at podium. In rear from the left
are Congressman Trent Franks (Az.); Reggie Littlejohn,
President of Women’s Rights Without Frontiers; and David
Aikman, Time Magazine Beijing Bureau Chief during the
1989 massacre; Harry Wu, former Chinese political
prisoner and now president of the Laogai Research
Foundation; CHAI Ling, a Tiananmen Square massacre
survivor who is now President of All Girls Allowed; KE
Cheng Ping, a Chinese woman forced by the Chinese
government’s family planning police to have an abortion,
without the comfort of her family and without
anesthesia. |
"Brothers and sisters are illegal
in China," said Congressman Chris Smith (NJ-04), a 15-term
member and longtime human rights advocate and Ranking Member of
the Congressional-Executive Commission on China. "So are
children of unwed mothers – they are all killed by compulsory
abortion. The policy further requires all women to obtain a
birth permit before becoming pregnant, and monitors the
reproductive cycles of all women of childbearing age through a
system of mandatory, regular, and crudely invasive physical
check-ups." Perhaps the
most dramatic moment came when a Chinese woman, KE Cheng Ping,
tearfully recounted how she was forced by China's family
planning police to have an abortion, deprived of the comfort of
her husband and family and without anesthesia. Also speaking
were Congressman Trent Franks (AZ-02); Harry Wu, former Chinese
political prisoner and now president of the Laogai Research
Foundation; CHAI Ling, a Tianamen Square massacre survivor who
is now President of All Girls Allowed; Reggie Littlejohn,
President of Women's Rights Without Frontiers; and David Aikman,
who was Time Magazine Beijing Bureau Chief during the 1989
massacre. "30
Years of the One-Child Policy in
China Equals 30 Years of Violence and Gendercide"
By Rep. Chris Smith
Tomorrow, September 25, marks 30
years of the Chinese government's infamous one-child-per-couple
policy. On that date in 1980 the Central Committee of the
Chinese Communist Party sent an open letter to party members
setting forth its plan to embark on a national one-child policy.
What came out of that letter? A
cruel and inhumane policy, a human rights violation that is, in
scope and seriousness, the worst human rights abuse in the world
today. No other government policy anywhere else in the world
systematically punishes, abuses, and violates women so grossly
as this. I'd like to point
out four aspects of the policy.
First, strict birth limits and
draconian surveillance. The policy limits most urban women to
one child – and permits most women in rural areas to have a
second child only if the first is female. That is, brothers and
sisters are illegal in China. So are children of unwed mothers –
they are all killed by compulsory abortion. The policy further
requires all women to obtain a birth permit before becoming
pregnant, and monitors the reproductive cycles of all women of
childbearing age through a system of mandatory, regular, and
crudely invasive physical check-ups.
Second, brutal penalties for failing
to comply. Women are put under extreme pressure to abort all
"out-of-plan" children – this is heightened by an atmosphere of
fear, created by paying anonymous pregnancy informants, and by
denying birth permits to co-workers and neighbors of women with
an "out-of-plan" pregnancy. The brave pregnant woman who refuses
to give in is usually detained and beaten – or, if she goes into
hiding, her relatives are detained and beaten. Families that
succeed in hiding an "out-of-plan" pregnancy are punished with
fines up to ten times the average annual income. If they can't
pay, their "out-of-plan" children are denied right to health
care, education, and marriage.
Third, "gendercide" of girls. The
result of one-child policy in culture with son-preference has
been widespread sex-selective abortion of daughters – gendercide.
Over 120 boys are born for every 100 girls. In some provinces
140 boys are born for every 100 girls. Tens of millions of
Chinese men will never be able to marry because potential wives
don't exist. Fourth, mass
violence. Of course the one-child policy itself is violence
against women on an unimaginable scale – over 500 million
Chinese women are controlled, threatened, and violated in the
most intimate aspect of their lives. Even beyond this, local
officials get raises and promotions based on their success in
enforcing the policy – they get extra pay for overseeing forced
abortions. This ensures extreme harshness and violence in
enforcing the one-child policy.
This is the world of the one-child
policy, a system of repression that has been traumatizing
hundreds of millions of Chinese women for thirty years. It's no
wonder – and so sad – that Chinese women have a sky-high suicide
rate – over 500 women commit suicide every day in China, and,
according to the WHO, China is the only country in the world
where more women than men commit suicide, and the female suicide
rate is three times the male.
One final comment, before I
introduce the other speakers, and then we'll take questions. The
violence of the one-child policy is absolutely ongoing. This
year there are reliable reports of large scale and violent
abortion enforcement campaigns in Guangdong, Fujian, Yunnan,
Zhejiang, and Jiangxi provinces. We even have a lot of detail on
the April 2010 forced sterilization campaign in Puning county,
Guangdong. The Times of London reported officials rounded up
women and men as well as the relatives of any resisters and
holding them in cramped conditions. Working 20 hour shifts for
20 days, they sterilized almost ten thousand people.
So I'd like to appeal to everybody:
on this tragic thirtieth anniversary, let's remember what the
Chinese people have suffered, and still suffer – especially the
women. And let's work and pray to end their suffering. I appeal
especially to the Chinese Premier, Wen Jiabao, who is in New
York city today: when you go back to China, re-examine the
policy and its cruelty. And
I appeal to President Obama to speak out in defense of the
Chinese people tomorrow, especially women and children, on this
terrible anniversary – what an encouragement that would be for
hundreds of millions of Chinese hearts, to suddenly feel that he
leader of the free world understands and empathizes with their
plight. |