Global Times

Charity’s methods questioned

▶ Girl’s death places spotlight on targeted aid: expert

- By Leng Shumei

Along with the developmen­t of online money-raising platforms, targeted aid has become increasing­ly popular in China. However, the behavior gained attention recently after a Chinese charity program was revealed to have allegedly raised 1 million yuan ($145,000) for a seriously sick girl but only gave her 20,000 yuan.

The program, called “9958,” is an aid platform for children under the China Charities Aid Foundation for Children (CCAFC). It started to raise money through online platforms for a malnourish­ed college girl named Wu Huayan from Southwest China’s Guizhou Province after she was hospitaliz­ed in October 2019 for a serious heart valve damage.

Wu, 24, was in the news last year when it was reported that she was just 135 centimeter­s tall and 21.5 kilograms in weight. She died on Monday.

However, a public welfare activist named Chen Lan accused the platform for only giving Wu 20,000 yuan for treatment while raising a total of 1 million yuan on China’s Twitter-like Sina Weibo on Tuesday.

“She could have received the best treatment in China,” Chen said in a Weibo post.

Chen gave four examples which showed the platform continued to raise money for deceased children for years until media reported on them in 2018.

Chen’s post triggered heated discussion­s on social media, with many netizens questionin­g the way the platform was using the money, and criticized it for making use of recipients’ miserable stories and donors’ kindness to make money.

Experts are questionin­g the legitimacy of charity foundation­s raising money for targeted people, which is rising in China as online money-raising platforms develop.

Unlike previous methods of raising money for a program for specific kinds of people, a particular target and a touching story are more likely to inspire donors’ compassion and bring about greater satisfacti­on, Jin Jinping, a professor at the Beijing University Law School and director of the Nonprofit Organizati­ons Law Center, told the Global Times on Wednesday.

But the behavior violates the definition of public welfare as it is aimed at the interests of a specific person rather than the public, Jin said.

The behavior could lead to various problems, including misuse of personal informatio­n, unfairness and misguiding donators, Jin said.

Media reported that 400,000 of the 1 million yuan was raised without informing Wu and her family.

The CCAFC released a statement on Tuesday claiming that it was under Wu and her family’s agreement that 9958 would transmit only 20,000 yuan to the hospital as the former wanted to set aside the rest for surgery and recovery.

According to media, Wu could not be operated on before the doctors made a proper diagnosis. Doctors believed she suffered from Hutchinson-Gilford Progeria syndrome (HGPS).

HGPS, or progeria, is a rare, fatal, genetic childhood condition resembling premature aging, according to the Progeria Research Foundation.

Wu donated her body to a local hospital for research.

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