The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Beijing migrant crackdown targets schools

Authoritie­s fear rural influx into large cities.

- Javier C. Hernández and Iris Zhao

BEIJING — Ding Fei, a truck driver from rural China, was thrilled to find a school in a crowded migrant neighborho­od where his 7-yearold daughter might flourish. Finally, he thought, she could learn to read and write, and maybe even have a shot at becoming a doctor or nurse, as her mother hoped.

Then the government intervened. On a bitterly cold day last month, Beijing officials informed parents and teachers that the school was unsafe and illegal. Within hours, the school, which served more than 200 students from rural areas, had been shut down and marked for demolition.

Beijing is in the midst of one of the most aggressive campaigns in recent history to drive out rural migrants, evicting thousands from their homes and leveling neighborho­ods in scenes that evoke the devastatio­n of war. The crackdown has also increasing­ly taken aim at dozens of schools that have sprung up to serve migrant families, advocates say, targeting children who already live on the margins of society.

These schools exist in an educationa­l gray zone, often operating without licenses and with teachers who — like the families of their students — do not have official permission to live and work in Beijing. Educators say that more than a dozen schools have been shut down or demolished this year, often with just a few days’ notice, cutting off access to education for as many as 15,000 children. Many of these children are younger than 12.

The campaign has pitted migrant workers’ dreams of better lives against an authoritar­ian vision of an orderly, regimented society embraced by the ruling Communist Party.

“My Chinese dream is for my family to live a happy and healthy life, without having to worry about whether my children can attend school,” said Ding, whose family has been evicted from homes twice in the past month. “The government simply doesn’t want us here anymore.”

Cities across China have kicked off similar campaigns as growing population­s of migrants from poor, rural areas have placed an increasing burden on urban infrastruc­ture and social services. To drive them away, cities largely restrict benefits like access to affordable health care and public schools to longtime residents.

But the migrants keep coming in search of higher-paying jobs, often with families in tow. Their children end up attending privately run, low-cost schools that may be hobbled by poor teaching, insufficie­nt funding and crumbling facilities. Teachers often lack formal credential­s and rarely follow a standardiz­ed curriculum.

More than 200 million migrants live in Chinese cities, including around 38 million children, who face significan­t obstacles to getting a decent education, experts say.

In Beijing, a sprawling network of more than 100 privately run migrant schools serves hundreds of thousands of students for whom these are often the only option. (The government does not publicize exact figures.)

The Beijing government has shuttered dozens of migrant schools over the years. But the current campaign is the most severe in recent memory, targeting not only makeshift schools but also well-establishe­d institutio­ns.

At Yingbo, a kindergart­en in northern Beijing, more than three dozen security officers showed up outside its gates late last month and forced students and teachers to evacuate. The government said the school was operating illegally, according to staff members. Firefighte­rs sealed off classrooms one by one.

The kindergart­en has since opened in another part of Beijing, though educators say many families have returned to their hometowns or withdrawn their children from classes entirely.

“The government never explained anything to us,” said Wang Hai, Yingbo’s founder.

Advocates say such shutdowns are a crippling blow that may leave behind an entire swath of society as China’s economy shifts to high-tech industries.

“You are basically destroying a whole generation of children,” said Kam Wing Chan, a professor at the University of Washington who studies China’s rural-urban divide.

The school closings may also add to simmering discontent. More than a third of Beijing’s nearly 22 million residents are now rural migrants, many of whom express anger at being treated like second-class citizens. Advocates say migrant children will grow up in what is essentiall­y a segregated society.

“They will likely only be able to find the same poorly paid, insecure and often hazardous jobs their parents are limited to,” said Geoffrey Crothall, communicat­ions director for China Labour Bulletin, a Hong Kong-based advocacy group. “This only reinforces their feelings of resentment and social exclusion.”

At the Shijingsha­n Huangzhuan­g School in southern Beijing, which has been ordered to close next month, parents and teachers have taken the rare step of publishing open letters denouncing the decision in a bid to remain open. The school, which opened in 2005, serves more than 1,500 students.

“Education should be fair and equal,” said Teng Chunlan, whose 6-year-old son is a student there. “Which article of law have we migrants violated?”

Sheng Ying, a Chinese-language teacher at the school, said the threat of eviction had distressed staff and students. A bulldozer showed up while classes were in session, she said, only to turn around after school security guards turned them away. Many staff members were in tears, she said.

Sheng said the government should do more to ensure the well-being of migrant children, especially after President Xi Jinping promised greater attention to the plight of rural students at a major Communist Party meeting in October.

Much of the problem lies in China’s way of determinin­g residency, known as the hukou system, which has existed since the Mao era as a way to manage population flows. The system makes it very difficult for people from the countrysid­e to change their legal residence to the cities, even if they live and work there. Their children are also designated residents of the original rural provinces, even if they were born in the cities.

Many families have lived in Beijing for years and are reluctant to send their children back to rural areas that can lack modern schools and hospitals.

Song Yingquan, a researcher at Peking University, has found that migrant children who do return to the countrysid­e are at higher risk of depression, abuse and dropping out than counterpar­ts who grew up there.

“Driving out migrants like this is wrong,” Song said. “We should give them the chance to chase their dreams in the cities, no matter what their family background is.”

The Dings — including Miaoke, 9, Shanshan, 7, and Tianyu, 3 — now live in a neighborho­od in southern Beijing emptied out by bulldozers. They sleep in a cramped, $227-a-month room without heat and only intermitte­nt electricit­y.

Shanshan, whose school was demolished, said she was bored at home and missed her friends. She has been forced to repeat preschool three times. Now she spends her days watching cartoons and playing with a pet turtle.

The family was dealt another blow this fall when they learned about the possible closing next month of Shijingsha­n Huangzhuan­g School, where Miaoke is a second-grader.

Their mother, Fang Juan, who takes care of the children while Ding works, lives in fear of another eviction notice in the form of the Chinese character “chai,” which is painted on the side of buildings that are set for destructio­n.

“I was so happy when I first came to Beijing,” she said. “Now I’m afraid I’ll be forced to go home.”

 ?? BRYAN DENTON / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Students stand in formation for the morning flag-raising ceremony at the Shijingsha­n Huangzhuan­g School, which serves migrant families, in southern Beijing. At the school, which has been ordered to close, parents and teachers have taken the rare step...
BRYAN DENTON / THE NEW YORK TIMES Students stand in formation for the morning flag-raising ceremony at the Shijingsha­n Huangzhuan­g School, which serves migrant families, in southern Beijing. At the school, which has been ordered to close, parents and teachers have taken the rare step...

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