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| A couple poses at a park in Fuzhou of
Fujian Province while staff from a wedding photo studio take their
pictures. [newsphoto/file] |
BEIJING, Nov. 30 (Xinhuanet) -- Between October 1, 2003
and September 30, 2004, within a year of China's new marriage registration
regulations going into effect, the marriage registration centre of Xicheng
District in Beijing saw 1,783 couples get divorced, almost double the number of
divorce cases in the previous 12 months.
The rise in the divorce rate has also been reported
in other districts in Beijing and cities like Shanghai, Tianjin, and Guangzhou,
although the national divorce rate itself will not be available until next year.
Zhou Baojun, a marriage registration clerk at the
Xicheng centre in Beijing, attributed the higher rate partially to the new
Marriage Registration Regulations, which she said have made divorce much easier.
Divorce procedures used to be so fastidious and
exhausting that many people decided to endure dead marriages rather than go
through the process to end it. Then there were traditions to get over, with
divorce being traditionally regarded as disgraceful, Zhou said. "Opposition from
parents, gossip from neighbours and colleagues, and division of property - all
these problems could put people off, not to mention the interference of work
units or neighbourhood committees by persuasion or mediation."
But the new regulations exempt the party who wants
the divorce from getting a reference, a previous requirement, from his or her
employer or community administrator. "It saves them a lot of trouble now they
don't need such a reference letter at the cost of their privacy," Zhou said.
With the new regulations, "divorce has become a
completely personal matter," said Professor Wang Zhenyu with the Chinese Academy
of Social Sciences (CASS).
The revised Marriage Law, which took effect in 2001,
is also considered to have loosened up legal standards in divorce suits. The law
stipulates that a divorce suit filed because of the other side's ex-marital
affairs, domestic violence, and addiction to drugs or gambling should be granted
if court mediation fails. Such detailed provisions, absent in the old marriage
law, mean release for those who are confined in "dead marriages," Wang said.
The rising divorce rate has become the theme of some
soap operas. One of them, "Chinese-Style Divorce," has become a prime-time hit
in the past two months in Beijing, Chengdu and Chongqing, with TV audiences of
10, 15 and 20 per cent according to a survey by AC Nelson. The novel was a
bestseller at online bookstores immediately after it hit the shelves.
The story, of a suspicious wife and a broken down
husband, also triggered enthusiastic online discussions about marriage. Many
Internet surfers in online discussions say the drama more or less reflects their
own lives.
But have the revised law and new regulations lowered
people's thresholds for divorce, as some people have anticipated? Wang Zhenyu
argues that it is unfair to blame the law and regulations for the rise.
"The increased number of divorce cases are due to
social changes. The marriage law and registration regulations were revised to
keep up with the pace of social development. They are not made or revised to
create social problems," she said.
A researcher of marriage and family affairs, she
observes that in an era when essential changes are taking place in every corner
of society, social values can by no means escape some sort of impact.
"It's natural that people's conceptions of love,
marriage and happiness are evolving while their culture is undergoing drastic
change and society becomes more open. Conception changes are bound to lead to
behavioural changes, such as ex-marital affairs, which often kill a marriage,"
Wang said.
The initial analysis of an on-going study by Wang and
her colleagues on divorce shows that some 70 to 80 per cent of divorce cases
were caused by ex-marital affairs.
"Even without the new law and registration
regulations, the divorce figure would climb, perhaps just not in such a burst,"
Wang said.
Statistics from the Ministry of Civil Affairs say the
divorce rate in China rose from 0.07 per cent in 1980 to 0.21 per cent last
year.
The classical Chinese oath of love, "to remain loyal
to each other even if the seas run dry and the rocks crumble," is becoming a
sheer literary curio, Wang said.
What's more important, she said, people have begun to
change the idea that divorce is a bad thing, as long as the decision is a
reasonable one.
From her study she also finds that Chinese people now
care more about the quality of their family life and personal value. "Fewer
people, especially the young, cherish the traditional value of mutual tolerance.
When they feel that if it's impossible to get along with each other, divorce
becomes a natural choice."
Marriage registration clerk Zhou Baojun finds that
more than 80 per cent of divorced couples are between 30 to 40 years old, and
many are well-educated, career people..
"They are usually more open-minded and not willing to
keep a family in name at the expense of their personal happiness," Zhou said.
Keeping a cool
head
One anonymous Internet surfer said on an online
message board that marriage should not become a ball and chain.
Sociologist Wang Zhenyu agrees. "If a couple fail to
or are unwilling to nourish a lasting affectionate feeling towards each other,
laws and regulations cannot save their relationship, though they may be tied
together by law papers and marriage certificates."
But Jiang Lanping, an official with the Xicheng
District Marriage Registration Centre, is not happy with the fact that many
people do not seem to be treating marriage seriously. A young couple came to the
centre for divorce registration only a week after they registered to get married
simply because of disagreements about wedding arrangements. Another couple who
were registered for divorce one morning returned only a few hours later reunite.
Friction between husband and wife is unavoidable,
said Hao Maishou, a Tianjin-based sociologist. Young couples should learn to
accommodate and tolerate each other.
Hao, at the Tianjin Academy of Social Sciences, warns
that marriage is something that should be managed. "Without good management from
both sides, there will be no perfect conjugal match. Too hasty a decision on
divorce, I think, is irresponsible."
Zhou Baojun said couples with children who intend to
divorce should think twice about the feelings of their children before they make
the move.
Though it is not a required procedure in the new
regulations for a registration clerk to mediate between people who want to get
divorced, Zhou said she does spend some time doing so.
"I hope my efforts can help them reconsider if their
decisions are reasonable. Young people are often hotheaded and middle-aged
people are usually under heavy work burdens and family pressure, and they might
come to a decision hastily.
"Children of school age are usually very sensitive on
the matter of their parents' divorce. If I find a couple have children at
school, I always ask them if they have made good arrangements to deal with the
negative psychological impact on their children," Zhou said.
In the first 10 months of this year, Zhou saw 25
couples change their minds after her counselling.
"If divorce means the end of an unhappy past and the
start of a shiny day, that's not bad. But isn't it much better if all couples
can enjoy the bliss of peaceful family life as they wished for when they first
made their choice?" Zhou said.
(China Daily)
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