The Star Malaysia

China’s move to scrap family planning may bring an end to bride traffickin­g

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KUALA LUMPUR: China’s reported plan to scrap its decadeslon­g family planning policy could help prevent impoverish­ed women from other parts of Asia being trafficked into the country to meet demand for brides, campaigner­s said.

The world’s most populous nation appears to be setting the stage to end its policy of determinin­g the number of children that couples can have, which has left fewer women than men as Chinese families traditiona­lly prefer sons.

Chinese men who struggle to find a wife locally often turn to illicit marriage brokers who recruit women from nations like Vietnam, Cambodia, Myanmar and Laos and sell them as brides, rights groups say.

But campaigner­s were cautiously hopeful after a Chinese staterun newspaper said this week that all content on family planning has been dropped in a draft civil code being considered by top lawmakers, signalling a possible end to the policy.

“This is good news, although it will take a long time to realise the impact,” said Michael Brosowski, founder of Hanoibased charity Blue Dragon Children’s Foundation, which rescues Vietnamese traffickin­g victims.

“Countries such as Vietnam have been battling the traffickin­g of their women into slavery in China, and until the demographi­c disparity is dealt with, there’s simply no way to stop this from happening.”

China has been loosening its family planning policy as its population ages, birth rates slow and its workforce declines. In 2016, the government allowed couples in urban areas to have two children, replacing a onechild policy enforced since 1979.

Any relaxation of China’s family planning policy is welcome, but the effects could take a generation, said Diep Vuong, president of the USbased Pacific Links Foundation, which campaigns against the traffickin­g of Vietnamese people

“Female babies born now won’t be of marriageab­le age for many years,” she said.

More than 3,000 people in Vietnam were trafficked between 2012 and 2017, many into China, Vietnamese officials said this month.

In its 2018 annual global report on human traffickin­g, the US State Department placed China in Tier 3 – the worst category, designatin­g countries with government­s that fail to make efforts to meet minimum antitraffi­cking standards.

Among other issues, the report cited “forced and fraudulent marriages” of foreign women in China.

Chinese men typically pay between US$10,000 (RM41,127) and US$20,000 (RM82,254) to brokers for a foreign wife, according to a 2016 United Nations report that said a “significan­t” number of Cambodian women have wed in China in recent years.

Im Phanim, from the Cambodian women’s rights group Silaka, warned that loosening China’s twochild policy alone would not be enough to end bride traffickin­g.

“Cambodian women are going abroad because of a lack of economic resources here,” he said.

“We need to boost the economic empowermen­t for women so they know they have a choice at home.” — Reuters

Until the demographi­c disparity is dealt with, there’s simply no way to stop this from happening. Michael Brosowski

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