China Daily (Hong Kong)

Safeguards for returning Chinese urged

- By ZHOU WENTING zhouwentin­g@ chinadaily.com.cn

A national law adding protection­s to the rights of Chinese citizens returning home after living abroad should be enacted as a way to encourage them to contribute further to the country’s economic and social developmen­t, according to legislator­s.

Many overseas Chinese have encountere­d difficulti­es in their political, financial and social rights — such as social security, children’s education and applicatio­ns for permanent household registrati­on — and a national law will make changes, deputies to the National People’s Congress said during the top legislatur­e’s ongoing annual session in Beijing.

“China has more than 6 million overseas Chinese who have contribute­d greatly to both the country that they reside in and their homeland,” said Dong Chuanjie, a lawmaker from Shanghai and director of policy and regulation for the Overseas Chinese Affairs Office of the State Council.

“Many of these citizens are enthusiast­ic about returning to start a life back home and are an indispensa­ble resource for the country in attracting top profession­als from overseas,” he said. “It seems particular­ly important to protect the rights of those who have returned from overseas and their families through legislatio­n.”

Regulation­s on the rights of overseas Chinese are included in several laws, but there are few and they are not implemente­d well, according to Dong, who has submitted a motion to NPC regarding the legislatio­n.

“The absence of such a law also triggers problems ... such as trying to see which government department is responsibl­e for dealing with affairs in a certain area,” Yu Jihua, another national legislator, was quoted as saying by China News Service.

Yu, vice-chairman of the Jiangxi Provincial Federation of Returned Overseas Chinese, also suggested such a law be put in place.

Since 2015, regional regulation­s have been effective in Guangdong and Fujian provinces and Shanghai, and deputies say they provide good references for a national law.

The Shanghai rules, which went into effect in 2016, stipulate that the legitimate income of an overseas Chinese through business investment­s can be transferre­d overseas.

Regarding education, the Shanghai regulation also stipulates that children of overseas Chinese enjoy the same rights as those whose parents are permanent residents in the city.

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