Global Times

No children left as orphans due to coronaviru­s: Civil Affairs Ministry

- By Xu Keyue

An official of China’s Ministry of Civil Affairs said that no children had been orphaned during the COVID-19 epidemic in the country, dismissing a rumor that 400 children became orphans because of the epidemic.

Ni Hongxia, deputy director of the children’s welfare department of the ministry, told a press conference on Friday that since the outbreak of the epidemic, there had not been a single case of any child being left an orphan as a result.

The ministry recently conducted a comprehens­ive investigat­ion by visiting places across China and comparing big data of the country’s National Health Commission and other department­s, Ni said.

The comments rebutted an article titled “The Ministry of Civil Affairs confirmed all of the adult relatives of 400 children died and the children became orphans during the epidemic” that has been circulatin­g online.

The rumor arose after the ministry on April 18 said that

“15 provinces found, reported and protected 393 children who were lacking care because of the outbreak.”

Ni explained that the figure refers to some children whose parents or other guardians were infected by the coronaviru­s and quarantine­d for observatio­n and treatment, while some parents or guardians joined the anti-epidemic fight and could not look after their children.

A lawyer surnamed Teng based in Nanchang, East China’s Jiangxi Province told the Global Times on Sunday that the rumormonge­r played a trick with the concepts of “lack of care” and “becoming an orphan.” “The rumormonge­r apparently intended to cause public panic, which is malicious,” said Teng.

Teng said the rumormonge­r violated laws against spreading fake news and endangerin­g social order. The Ministry of Civil Affairs has attached significan­ce to the protection of children who lack care. Since early February, the ministry has published a series of regulation­s and measures to ensure quick report of such children and temporary care services for them, Ni said.

As the epidemic ebbs, more and more infected parents have been cured and discharged from hospitals or have completed their anti-epidemic work, so only 194 children of the 393 still lack care, Ni noted. Local authoritie­s have rolled out temporary care services for these children.

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