The Asian Age

‘Defend honour’: Beijing releases morality code

Calls on citizens to be honest, polite, civilised when dining, travelling

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Beijing: China has released new “morality” guidelines for its citizens on everything from civic education and how parents should teach their children to rubbish sorting and the appropriat­e etiquette for raising the national flag, the Guardian reported.

The “Outline for the Implementa­tion of the Moral Constructi­on of Citizens in the New Era” calls on Chinese citizens to be honest and polite, to be “civilised” when dining, travelling, or watching a sports competitio­n, and “defend China’s honour” while abroad.

The guidelines, focusing heavily on promoting patriotism, also called for the formulatio­n of “national etiquette” for things such as singing the national anthem, raising the national flag, or ceremonies for when one joins the ruling Chinese communist party.

Such etiquette should “enhance people’s attitude toward the party and country and organise a collective sense of identity and belonging”, according to the document, released by the party’s central committee and the state council. It also called for citizens to “carry forward the spirit of Lei Feng”, a former soldier who has been heavily used in party propaganda campaigns since the 1960s.

Carl Minzner, China scholar and professor of law at Fordham Law School in New York, said, “The general goal of these guidelines is to define ‘good’ behaviour, and that includes everything from the ethical lessons you might want your children to internalis­e, from reading Peppa Pig stories to more political concepts of civic virtue – such as how citizens should think of their relationsh­ip with respect to their leaders.”

Released on Sunday ahead of a major leadership meeting, the Fourth Plenum, taking place in Beijing, the guidelines underline Chinese leader

Xi Jinping’s focus at the meeting, shoring up political legitimacy during a time when Beijing faces severe challenges from protests in Hong Kong to a slowing economy and a protracted trade war with the US.

“Under the background of profound changes in the internatio­nal and domestic situation and profound changes in China’s economic and social developmen­t … policies and regulation­s, and social governance are still not enough” the document says in its introducti­on. “There are still many problems.”

Most important among the guidelines is for citizens to treat Xi Jinping Thought as the “core” of their civic moral compass. In contrast to a previous version, first released in 2001, several references to other leaders in the country’s history, from Mao Zedong to Deng Xiaoping are omitted.

Experts say the document is a sign that propaganda work will be ramped up.

 ??  ?? ◗ The guidelines focuses heavily on promoting patriotism
◗ It also calls for the formulatio­n of “national etiquette” for things such as singing the national anthem, raising the national flag, or ceremonies for when one joins the ruling Chinese communist party
◗ It also calls for citizens to “carry forward the spirit of Lei Feng”, ex-soldier, heavily used in party propaganda campaigns since the 1960s
◗ The guidelines focuses heavily on promoting patriotism ◗ It also calls for the formulatio­n of “national etiquette” for things such as singing the national anthem, raising the national flag, or ceremonies for when one joins the ruling Chinese communist party ◗ It also calls for citizens to “carry forward the spirit of Lei Feng”, ex-soldier, heavily used in party propaganda campaigns since the 1960s

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