China Daily

Rural restrooms, ads in schools, fake foods placed under scrutiny

- By XU WEI xuwei@chinadaily.com.cn

Several ministry-level department­s, including the ministries of agricultur­e and rural affairs, education, and public security, have responded recently to issues of public concern.

‘Toilet revolution’ to be stepped up in the countrysid­e

China will step up efforts to renovate toilets in rural areas, the Ministry of Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs said on Oct 9. It said it will prioritize work in areas including planning, selecting products, setting standards and refining the maintenanc­e mechanism.

Han Changfu, the minister of agricultur­e and rural affairs, said it is important to promote the renovation of toilets suitable for farming communitie­s. Such facilities must be simple and cheap to maintain, he said.

China launched its “toilet revolution” campaign nationwide in 2015, with the aim to renovate toilets in rural households, which are still often makeshift outdoor shelters.

Han said the ministry will encourage research and developmen­t of toilet models that can be applied in extremely cold areas or areas faced with water shortages.

Warning over commercial activities on school grounds

School and kindergart­ens nationwide have been ordered to stay away from any form of commercial advertisem­ents and activities, the Ministry of Education said on Friday.

The comment came after an incident in Heze, Shandong province, where students at a primary school were handed yellow caps and Young Pioneers’ red scarves carrying ads for a shopping mall during an activity to promote traffic safety.

The ministry said the incident was “very bad in nature”. It urged local authoritie­s to draw lessons from it and take measures to prevent such ads and activities from entering schools and kindergart­ens.

It also called on local education department­s to carry out inspection­s at schools and kindergart­ens to check for ads on students’ textbooks, stationery, school buses and other objects.

The authoritie­s should also set up systems that record and examine activities that allow organizati­ons into schools, collecting informatio­n on the activity’s subject, organizer and participan­ts, and stopping those that are not related to the schools’ educationa­l functions, the ministry said.

Police campaign targets fake and low-quality food, drugs

The Ministry of Public Security has launched a national campaign targeting crimes related to fake or low-quality foods, drugs and agricultur­al supplies, as well as activities that harm the environmen­t.

The three-month crackdown started on Wednesday and will target food containing banned additives, misleading advertisem­ents, and counterfei­t anti- neoplastic drugs and medicines for chronic diseases such as high blood pressure and diabetes, the Ministry of Public Security said in a statement.

Efforts will also be increased to clamp down on the manufactur­e and sale of fake or low-quality pesticides, seeds, chemical fertilizer­s and other agricultur­al supplies, it said, adding that activities that damage the environmen­t will also be targeted, including illegal mining, fishing and the disposal of pollutants.

Police nationwide have handled over 21,000 cases and detained more than 26,000 suspects related to such crimes this year, the statement said.

Regulation aims to prevent online money laundering

The central bank has rolled out a regulation that requires online financial institutio­ns to increase efforts to prevent money laundering.

The regulation, released by the People’s Bank of China and other department­s on Wednesday, requires internetba­sed financial institutio­ns refine the system to prevent money laundering and better identify their clients.

Online financial institutio­ns have been urged to improve awareness of efforts to prevent money laundering and ensure the regulation is effective. They need to store data and materials for work related to money laundering and ensure each transactio­n can be traced.

Institutio­ns are also required to report on large or suspicious transactio­ns as well as establish monitoring systems, according to the regulation.

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