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BEIJING, June 26 (Xinhuanet) -- China on Sunday
started to try banning sexual harassment through legislation, after surveys
found that Chinese professional women were widely suffering sexual harassment.
The draft amendment to China's Law
on Women's Right Protection, with provisions to ban sexual harassment, was
submitted to the nation's top legislature, the Standing Committee of the
National People's Congress (NPC), on Sunday for first deliberation.
According to the draft amendment, no one shall be
allowed to subject women to sexual harassment and all work units shall take
measures against sexual harassment in working places.
"The provisions, which were newly added in the Law on
Women's Right Protection to save women from sexual harassment, filled the legal
gap in women's rights protection. It was for the first time for China to forbid
sexual harassment through legislation," said Wu Changzhen, professor with the
China University of Political Science and Law, who was also the head of the
draft team of the amendment of the Law on Women's Right Protection.
A newly-completed national sample survey, which was
jointly launched by Sina.com and the official Fortnightly Chat Magazine, showed
that amid the more than 8,000 respondents, 22 percent of male respondents
suffered sexual harassment, while 79 percent of female respondents suffered
sexual harassment.
Another survey, organized by the Chinese Academy of
Social Sciences, showed that nearly 40 percent of professional women, whoworked
for private enterprises or foreign companies, suffered sexual harassment, while
the figure in the state-owned enterpriseswas merely 18 percent.
A local survey, conducted by the northeastern China's
Liaoning Province, showed that more than 70 percent of women working in service
industries suffered sexual harassment of different degrees.
Prof. Wu Changzhen said although sexual harassment
was not as severe as rape, it could bring physical injury and emotional
pressure. In the serious situation, sexual harassment sufferers will lose
love-making ability and become world-weary.
However, Chinese for long regarded sexual harassment
as an ethics issue. Few citizens appealed to law after suffering sexual
harassment. From 2001 to now, Chinese courts only received 10 cases concerning
sexual harassment and only one of them won the lawsuit.
Jiang Yongping, research fellow with the All-China
Women's Federation, spoke highly of the provision, which reads as "all work
units shall take measures against sexual harassment in working places". She said
work units have responsibility of creating a safe working environment for women.
Law experts also pointed out that to root out sexual
harassmentfrom the society takes time, because the evidence collection for
sexual harassment is difficult and Chinese women always felt shamed to speak out
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