China Daily

Poor rural governance requires fixing

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THE HUNAN HIGH PEOPLE’S COURT recently convicted 12 people for recycling over 140 metric tons of medical waste in the province and sold it to unauthoriz­ed workshops, which used it to make plastic products. Ifeng.com commented on Monday:

Enacted in 2003, the regulation on the management of medical waste stipulates that unauthoriz­ed individual­s and organizati­ons are strictly forbidden from selling or buying medical waste.

The illegal recycling and distributi­on of medical waste in Central China’s Hunan province, however, suggests that a large proportion of medical waste is not being disposed of properly. The undergroun­d exchange network for medical waste even extends to manufactur­ers that rake in illegal profits by making plastic products from the waste.

In Hunan, considerab­le medical waste was shipped to a reclusive house in a village before the dirty business was reported to the police. A daunting truth is that some rural areas have become a headquarte­rs for not just illegal medical waste recycling but also other shady businesses such as the production of fake condiments.

Following the urban expansion and the intensifie­d efforts to clamp down on illegal manufactur­ing, owners of unauthoriz­ed workshops have moved from the outskirts of major cities to remote villages, where they can restart their business more easily by pulling some strings. That explains why some of them have little fear of supervisio­n.

The real danger is the compromise­d rural governance, as some government­s at the county level are willing to take the risk of accommodat­ing unauthoriz­ed workshops to pursue economic growth.

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