China Daily

Govt moves to tighten dating sites

Guideline designed to build trust in online matchmakin­g platforms

- By HOU LIQIANG houliqiang@chinadaily.com.cn

China moved a step toward helping people find love on Monday, with the issuance of a guideline governing dating websites.

Government bodies will coordinate to promote realname registrati­ons and authentica­tion on dating sites and crack down on marital fraud and other crimes related to matchmakin­g services, according to the guideline issued by the Central Committee of the Communist Youth League of China, the Ministry of Civil Affairs and the National Health and Family Planning Commission.

The number of singles in the country remains large, while available online dating platforms come with doubts about authentici­ty.

“It’s a common need of young adults and a big issue in life to fall in love and get married,” the guideline said. “The work related to young adults’ love and marriage will not only affect their healthy developmen­t but is also related to social stability and harmony.”

Vowing to promote trustworth­y matchmakin­g services that will meet the diversifie­d needs of young adults by mobilizing nongovernm­ental bodies and social forces, the guideline also said “there should be more channels for them to voice their needs and comment” in matchmakin­g services.

With about 200 million unmarried people in the country, the Chinese government has kept marriage on its agenda. The guideline was drafted to help execute the Middle and Long-Term Youth Developmen­t Plan (2016-25).

Published in April, it was the first 10-year developmen­t plan for youth, defined in the plan as those aged from 14 to 35. Marriage is one of the 10 categories it covers.

He Junke, a senior official of the CYL Central Committee, said in May that youth organizati­ons, including the CYL, will help young adults tie the knot.

While many netizens gave the government a thumbs-up for its high-profile attention to young people, some say the guideline is depressing.

“Growing up in the traditiona­l Chinese cultural atmosphere, I also think it’s right to get married at the proper time to enjoy a happy family life. But it happens that we may fail to find our Mr Rights in time,” said 24-yearold Han Yanni, who works for a security company in Beijing.

She said she has been pushed by her parents to get married. The guideline just brings more pressure and makes her think of herself as a loser, she said.

The guideline was published after a suicide made headlines for days and triggered widespread concern about the authentici­ty of dating websites.

On Sept 7, tech entreprene­ur Su Xiangmao, 37, killed himself in part because his ex-wife had hidden the fact that she had been married briefly before, according to the note he left behind.

The couple met in March on dating website Jiayuan.

According to the suicide note, the woman told him about her previous marriage just one day ahead of their marriage registrati­on in June.

Su wrote that his wife’s character changed after they got married, and they divorced on July 18, after Su agreed to give her a villa in Hainan province and 10 million yuan ($1.5 million) she demanded for mental distress. He added that she also threatened to tell the authoritie­s he had been evading his taxes.

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