A public outcry has been raised over the plight of a woman who's
considering an illegal abortion at 8 months because the child would
violate China's restrictive birth policy and would cost her husband his
job as a police officer.
Members of the public
have been phoning local officials in the couple's Yunnan province
community to inquire about the case, and an online travel service
reportedly has offered the husband a position if he loses his government
job.
The case has rekindled debate over whether employment in the public
sector should be used to enforce the policy that limits urban couples
to one child in cases where both husband and wife have at least one
sibling.
The 41-year-old woman, who spoke on
condition that she be identified only by her surname, Chen, said in a
telephone interview Monday that the couple felt under pressure to abort
their second child to keep her husband's job with local police.
"I'm fearful," Chen said. "If my husband believes I must abort the child, there's nothing I can do."
She
also grew uneasy about the public attention her case was drawing. "I am
worried he would lose his job even after we lose the baby, if the
situation gets messy."
Chen said the couple had
hoped for a policy change that would allow them to have a second child
but found her unexpectedly pregnant earlier this year in violation of
the current rule.
Wen Xueping, a family
planning official in Yunnan's Chuxiong prefecture, said the couple will
not be forced to abort the baby but have been warned of the consequences
of having it. Couples who violate the child policy face hefty fines and
- if they have government jobs - face being sacked.
Wen
said members of the public have been calling his offices to inquire
about the couple, whose case has garnered much attention on China's
social media.
"No way will we force them to
have an abortion," Wen said. "But there also is the suspicion that the
couple wants to avoid the punishment for breaking the rules by stirring
up public interest."
In 2012, the Chinese
public was angry when a 23-year-old woman in the northern province of
Shaanxi was forced to have a late-term abortion. Local family planning
officials were punished, and Beijing sternly warned against any
late-term abortion.
The state-owned news
website The Paper said James Liang, a senior executive of the web travel
service CTrip, has offered the man in Yunnan a job if he loses his
position on the police force.
Many critics are
calling for an end to the one-child policy altogether, saying that China
cannot afford to be an aging society. They say that taking away a
family's livelihood is too draconian a punishment - especially for a
family that will now have two children to raise. Some observers have
said the couple should have obeyed the one-child policy and should not
expect any exemption.
China has eased the
policy to allow for more couples to have a second child, but urban
parents who are not only children themselves still can have only one
child, as in the case of Chen and her husband.
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