More than 50% youth unfit to join China Army
About 56% of youth applying to join the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) in an unnamed China city have been found unfit in the last year, the PLA Daily, a state-run military newspaper said last week in a startling report.
The reasons for the men youth being unfit were underscored as obesity and in men, a condition called varicocele when veins become enlarged in the scrotum.
The report went on to say that frequent masturbation and a sedentary lifestyle led to such a condition although medical science does not draw a clear linkage between varicocele and masturbation. The other reasons given for the unhealthy condition of Chinese youth were the excessive use of smart-phones and excessively high mineral content in drinking water.
The report has generated a big online debate with many voicing concerns that the future may see a paucity of fit men for recruitment for the PLA, the world’s biggest army particularly in the backdrop of a strict one-child norm for three decades which were slightly relaxed only in November 2013 when married couples in which just one parent is an only child can also have a second baby.
Reacting to the report, the Chinese Defense Ministry’s recruitment office said on Tuesday: “China’s recruitment process has strict rules and procedures… The quality of our recruits is guaranteed, and the headwaters of our military will flow long and strong.”
Putting out an official statement which dismissed speculation that unhealthy applicants are entering the armed forces, it said: “Recruitment is the foundation of national defense, and high-quality recruits are crucial to the military’s combat capability.”
While the educational profile of PLA recruits has improved over the years, in 2014, the Chinese military lowered its height requirement for males from 162 centimeters to 160 cm, and for female candidates from 160 cm to 158 cm. It also reduced eyesight requirements.
Meanwhile, the Indian army, after finding that possibly a third of its men would be overweight, issued an order in May that an annual “obesity evaluation examination” would be held.