China Daily Global Edition (USA)

STRONGER LEGAL MEASURES URGED TO COMBAT SEXUAL HARASSMENT

- By SATARUPA BHATTACHAR­JYA and WANG RU Contact the writers at satarupa@chinadaily.com.cn

Online discussion­s about sexual misconduct have increased in China, with allegation­s surfacing against some prominent men from media, academic, charity, religious and corporate circles during the past few weeks.

At least one case is now part of a broader Chinese police investigat­ion.

The government has included a provision on sexual harassment in the workplace in a civil code draft that was presented to the National People’s Congress Standing Committee last week, according to Xinhua News Agency. The draft guideline asks employers to take steps to prevent harassment and heed complaints.

China Daily’s recent interviews with 12 people — university students, a teacher, a social worker and a lawyer, who live in Beijing, elsewhere on the Chinese mainland, and the United States — indicate a rising awareness in China of sexual harassment, abuse and assault, aided by an engaged social media.

All six female students interviewe­d said they had faced some form of sexual harassment. One alleged she had been assaulted by an older male relative.

The social worker and lawyer called for stronger legal measures to combat sexual harassment.

While rape cases are prosecuted under the Criminal Law, harassment is often viewed through the prism of administra­tive regulation­s, mainly related to labor disputes.

The three male students interviewe­d said young men in China seem to have a better grasp of gender equality than men from earlier generation­s.

All interviewe­es were unanimous that sexual misconduct is ultimately about power structures — whether on university campuses or in the workplace.

In July, the Beijing Qianqian Law Firm witnessed a rise in the number of women seeking advice on sexual harassment. Set up in 1995, it has handled an average of 10 sexual assault and harassment cases a year, with most related to rape.

Lyu Xiaoquan, its executive director, said female university students and women from research institutio­ns have visited the firm recently, saying they have faced harassment.

He said the firm, which also provides a pro bono service, counsels victims on how to proceed with harassment cases step-by-step.

But the task has not been easy, because unlike rape, which falls under the Criminal Law, and has prison sentences ranging from three to 10 years and sometimes beyond, depending on the severity of the crime, sexual harassment is not governed by a stand-alone law.

Lyu pointed to the special administra­tive regulation­s for the protection of female workers and the Women’s Rights Protection Act as two documents that refer to harassment.

The special regulation­s, which took effect in 2012 and were formulated by the State Council, China’s Cabinet, stipulate that organizati­ons “shall prevent sexual harassment of female workers”, and the women’s act of 2005 states that women can report harassment to “relevant institutio­ns”.

“Apart from labor arbitratio­n, ‘loss of dignity’ is the other ground for filing cases related to sexual harassment,” Lyu said.

“We want a separate law for sexual harassment, but before that, we need to settle questions such as ‘What is the definition of sexual harassment?’ and ‘What purpose would such a law serve?’” he added.

Li Dan, a women’s rights campaigner and director of a nongovernm­ental organizati­on in Beijing, favors more legal clarity on the subject of sexual harassment and publicity surroundin­g it.

Citing the example of the Anti-Domestic Violence Law, which took effect in 2015, he said many survivors and some police stations still do not know about it.

“Even if the victims want help, few know what to do,” Li said.

Apart from students, female factory workers are very vulnerable to sexual harassment, according to earlier surveys by labor organizati­ons in Guangdong province.

After allegation­s of sexual misconduct were made in the past three months or so against relatively high-profile individual­s — who have denied any wrongdoing — online discussion­s on the topic have escalated. Even so, such discussion­s are largely confined to the media, students and activists, Li said.

According to Sina Weibo user “Bu Lang Fen Zi”, sexual harassment ought to be included in a legal framework, and the opportunit­y provided by the discussion­s should be used to promote legislativ­e enforcemen­t, otherwise, the bravery of those who experience it will not bear fruit.

Chang Jiang, an associate professor at Tsinghua University, created the #I’llBeYourVo­ice hashtag on Sina Weibo in late July, and was soon flooded by responses.

Chang said more than 600 people, the vast majority of them women, had shared stories of sexual misconduct through private messages to him that week.

He redacted the Sina Weibo “handles” of those whose messages he reposted on his public page. All such posts were either from victims or those who knew victims. His page was viewed some 1 million times alone on Aug 1.

Sexual misconduct is a universal problem and no country can claim to be free of it, with variations only in degree.

In the Chinese context, social media have been at the forefront of the battle. Lyu Xiaoquan,

Chang said that among the messages he received on Sina Weibo in late July, the main groups were female college students or young graduates who had experience­d sexual harassment, women who were born or grew up in rural areas and alleged that they had suffered sexual abuse or assault, and “real-name whistleblo­wers” who accused specific people of misconduct.

“It was heartbreak­ing, especially when I read the stories from the girls in the countrysid­e,” said Chang, 36, who teaches journalism and communicat­ion at the university in Beijing. “This is something so dark that I never imagined (existed) before.”

In a culturally conservati­ve society such as China’s, such campaigns can help eliminate “a sense of shame” that victims of assault, abuse and harassment might feel, he added.

The six female university students interviewe­d said the online discussion­s empower women as well as men to break the invisible code of silence.

The majority wanted to remain anonymous when talking to China Daily about their ordeals, but most described the women who identified themselves on social media while sharing similar stories as “brave”. One interviewe­e said it is easier for influentia­l women to come forward than for other women.

It took years for some Hollywood actresses to go public with accusation­s against film producer Harvey Weinstein.

“It is a kind of reform to promote gender equality and awareness,” said a 22-year-old female student from Beijing Foreign Studies University, of the wider online engagement over the subject in China.

“My friends and I have experience­d different kinds of sexual harassment in public. And, such things have cast a shadow in our hearts,” said the student of Chinese, adding that gender discrimina­tion is a root cause.

Shi Hanjin, a Chinese student who attends college in Los Angeles, said she had yet to encounter any woman who had not felt sexually harassed, but that through sharing stories women find out that they are not alone.

“I have met male strangers who have stared at me or tried to grope me in public both in Guangzhou (the capital of Guangdong province) and here in LA,” Shi said.

Three other female students in China emphasized the need to enhance gender education from childhood.

“The government should help higher education institutio­ns establish related organizati­ons to receive and deal with reports of sexual harassment,” said a 23-year-old female student of public finance at Zhongnan University of Economics and Law in Wuhan, capital of Hubei province.

“The government should emphasize education field from childhood.”

A 24-year-old female student of English literature from Xiamen University in Fujian province urged the government to open channels where harassment complaints can be made, and said awareness should be improved among men and boys in the country. Her university has been offering some safety lessons, “warning girls of the dangers they may meet in this regard”, she added.

In essence, these students want anti-harassment offices to be set up on university campuses.

A law student, 25, from China University of Political Science and Law in Beijing, said she was harassed by a man in his 50s during her internship at a company where he worked.

She said she saw no reason why universiti­es should not have “zero tolerance” for sexual misconduct by faculty members, adding that many students keep quiet, fearing the fallout on their academic careers from trying to expose the transgress­ions of their teachers.

Liang Tao, 23, who is studying biomedical engineerin­g at Zhejiang University, said he will pay closer attention to women’s rights now that he knows more about them from the online discussion­s. One of his female classmates was harassed on a bus, he added.

Empathy for survivors and anger toward perpetrato­rs has always existed in society, he said. “But in the past, there was no social media and people’s awareness was low.”

Another male interviewe­e, Lian Dashuai, 25, from Southeast University in Nanjing, Jiangsu province, said women who speak out against their harassers usually do so once they are well away from them. Lian, who is studying preventive medicine, sees the related discussion­s, especially in Chinese universiti­es, as a positive developmen­t.

Both the male students and also Zhang Zepeng, who is studying at Zhejiang University of Finance and Economics, feel that younger Chinese men have a better understand­ing of gender equality — they do not view women as “inferior”. The male interviewe­es also said they support the online conversati­ons.

Drawing a slightly different picture of the modern Chinese man, two female students said during the interviews that their partners appeared indifferen­t to their plight when they told them about incidents of sexual misconduct they had experience­d in the past.

For one female university student from Jiangsu, the importance of awareness can never be overstated.

“My family told me not to live with my boyfriend,” she said of the conservati­ve approach some parents have toward livein relationsh­ips in China.

“But they failed to tell me how to respond to sexual assault,” she said, alleging that an older male relative had assaulted her in a different area of China years ago. in this

We want a separate law for sexual harassment, but before that, we need to settle questions such as ‘What is the definition of sexual harassment?’” executive director of Beijing Qianqian Law Firm

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