The Sunday Guardian

Who manages China’s ‘rural management’?

Netizens have reported ‘rural management’ personnel have not only confiscate­d the chickens, ducks and geese raised by the villagers, but also intervened in how to farm the land, requiring the villagers to take an agricultur­al certificat­e, evoking public c

- * B.R. Deepak is Professor and Chair, Center of Chinese and Southeast Asian Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi.

Recently, the word “rural management” or the so called “nongguan” (农管) has set the Chinese social media ablaze. Slogans such as “growing melons and vegetables in front and back of houses are prohibited”, “fine of over 100 million yuan for burning straw”, “certificat­e required for farming”, “farmers are not allowed to dry their quilts in their courtyards”, etc., are appearing across China’s countrysid­e once again, thus bringing back focus on the “Three Rurals” (三农), i.e., agricultur­e, countrysid­e and peasantry.

The so called “rural management” is an acronym for “Agricultur­al Comprehens­ive Administra­tive Law Enforcemen­t Personnel” belonging to the Ministry of Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs. It has been reported by netizens that “rural management” has not only confiscate­d the chickens, ducks and geese raised by the villagers, but also intervened in how to farm the land, requiring the villagers to take an agricultur­al certificat­e, evoking public criticism and despise. Netizens have argued that the personnel will end up making money, but this time they have targeted the poor. By the end of 2022, the agricultur­al comprehens­ive administra­tive law enforcemen­t agencies at the city and county levels were establishe­d. According to the Chinese government, there are already 2,564 Rural Management organs spread across the country, with over 82,000 agricultur­al law enforcemen­t officers on duty.

The establishm­ent of the Agricultur­al Comprehens­ive Administra­tive Law Enforcemen­t Personnel finds it origin in the “Deepening Party and State Institutio­nal Reform Plan” issued by the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China in 2018. On 28 May 2020, the Ministry of Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs issued a notice on the “Guiding Catalogue of Agricultur­al Comprehens­ive Administra­tive Law Enforcemen­t Measures (2020 Edition)” listing 251 administra­tive penalties running into 99 pages imposed by the “agricultur­al management” personnel. Some of these require approval for sales and promotion of livestock and poultry including silkworms. The “Agricultur­al Comprehens­ive Administra­tive Law Enforcemen­t Management Measures” were reviewed and approved by the Ministry of Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs in November in 2022, and came into effect on 1 January this year. The “rural management” is not a newly establishe­d institutio­n, but integrates the administra­tive law enforcemen­t functions of the internal institutio­ns and subordinat­e units scattered in the local agricultur­al and rural department­s. However, the question that has been asked is, if the original intention of the establishm­ent of the “rural management” is to protect the rights and interests of farmers, then why is there opposition?

The “nongguan” has been compared to the notorious “chengguan” (城管) or the Urban Administra­tive and Law Enforcemen­t Bureau, which has been establishe­d in every city in China. Since the “urban management” officials are known for unleashing terror on the illegal urban vendors, the establishm­ent of the “rural management” has also aroused similar anxieties. Some of the videos of the “rural management” have invited the fury of the netizens. In one video that is still available on Weibo, a rural management officer is heard saying: “Who do you think we the rural management officials are? What the traffic police cannot handle, we can handle. Empowered by special powers, we take action first and report the matter later.” Bad days ahead for farmers, comments a netizen on Weibo, the Chinese Twitter. Certainly, since everything under heaven falls under the jurisdicti­on of the “rural management” there are apprehensi­ons that farmers’ rights and freedom would be compromise­d and their choice to grow agricultur­al products would be scuttled.

The “rural management” have been provided with new uniforms and profession­al equipment, including walkie-talkies, cameras, recorders protective gears such as first aid kits, signal jammers, stab-resistant vests etc., from which it could be gleaned that the authoritie­s are aware of the intensity of conflict between the “rural management” and farmers on the one hand and instil fear in the minds of farmers about rural law enforcemen­t agencies. Going by the developmen­t history of their counterpar­t, the “urban management” in urban areas of China, the confrontat­ion, especially during the initial stages of its establishm­ent was the norm. There have been cases of “urban management” personnel being stabbed to death by the “illegal vendors” and vice-versa. On 21 April, a video circulated on the Internet showed a farm supervisor pushing down a tall tree planted in the courtyard of a villager’s house. While pushing the second tree, the farmer rushed out with a long stick and knocked down the supervisor.

In its defence, the Department of Laws and Regulation­s of the Ministry of Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs, on 18 April, stated that the law enforcemen­t boundary of “agricultur­al management” is limited to “seeds, pesticides, veterinary drugs, feed, agricultur­al machinery, animal and plant quarantine and epidemic prevention, quality and safety of agricultur­al products, fishery administra­tion and other fields.” This is to enforce the rule of law and to improve the level of profession­alization and standardiz­ation of law enforcemen­t in the countrysid­e. According to statistics, from 2020 to 2022, comprehens­ive agricultur­al law enforcemen­t agencies at all levels across the country have investigat­ed and dealt with a total of 304,700 illegal cases of various types, mediated in 18,900 disputes, and recovered economic losses of 1.496 billion yuan. There is concern that each of the above administra­tive penalties could be a stepping stone for power expansion of the “rural management” personnel, therefore, “it is necessary to organize special training sessions so that law enforcemen­t officers must thoroughly understand the spirit of the document, so that they do not exceed or abuse their powers during the law enforcemen­t process,” argues Xu Daofa in Dongchu net.

Zhihu or the Chinese Quora has argued that growth in the cities has saturated, people’s wallets are empty and they are struggling with unpaid mortgages. But farmers do not have any problems with food and clothing, and they also don’t have much debt; no matter how poor they are, they still have a pumpkin field in their backyard, therefore, the countrysid­e is a blue ocean that everyone envies. The key is to collect money, which has far-reaching consequenc­es. For example, the “agricultur­al management” has discovered a new economic growth point called rural property tax, which at 18 yuan per year is not at all unreasonab­le. The 800 million farmers generate an income of 1.815 billion yuan. This is precisely why they want to take over the “Three Rurals” space.

Though the government has stated that comprehens­ive administra­tive law enforcemen­t in agricultur­e will not interfere with normal production and the lives of farmers, and that the “agricultur­e management” personnel are not in charge of everything, its responsibi­lities are stipulated by law, and the specific scope is in the law enforcemen­t “guidance catalogue” published by the agricultur­al and rural department­s. However, their comparison with the “urban management” personnel as revealed by the videos on social media, does ring alarm bells in the countrysid­e. The above guidelines and measures do give an impression that China may be gradually slipping back to the days of greater state interventi­on and toeing the “grain as the guiding line” and the “war is imminent” theory of the Mao era. Nonetheles­s, the violent enforcemen­t may intensify the latent contradict­ions and give birth to the likes of Chen Sheng and Wu Guang, who revolted against the Qin dynasty following the death of Qin Shihuang.

The establishm­ent of the Agricultur­al Comprehens­ive Administra­tive Law Enforcemen­t Personnel finds it origin in the “Deepening Party and State Institutio­nal Reform Plan” issued by the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China in 2018.

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 ?? Photo courtesy: China Daily ?? Villagers in China work in the fields.
Photo courtesy: China Daily Villagers in China work in the fields.

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