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BEIJING, August 2 (Xinhuanet) -- Male government
employees wearing long hair and ladies with shoulder-strape blouses have been
barred from entering office buildings of the Haidian District Government of this
capital city of China as of Monday.
This is just part of the government
campaign to burnish the public image of the city's civil servants before the
2008 Olympic Games.
Civil servants are required to dress properly when on
duty. Shorts and sandals are strictly forbidden. Ladies are also advised to wear
light makeup.
The district government has also set up a committee
supervising the appearance of their employees. Those who refuse to correct
themselves after warnings will be disqualified for annual evaluations.
Meanwhile, the municipal government of Beijing is
drawing up a set of regulations concerning the appearance for civil servants in
the city. The rules are expected to stipulate more details from the make-up to
hair styles.
"We all have our own little problems or bad habits
with our appearance and behavior before the public," Liu Guanjun, a deputy to
the Beijing Municipal People's Congress, said." But if you are a civil servant
representing the government and are being watched by the public, you should act
like a role model."
While admitting shoulder-strape blouses have become
vogue among young Chinese women in this hot summer season, bare feet in sandals
are also highly visible among the public, Liu maintained that such behaviors,
incompatible with public servants' capacity at office, have constituted
disrespect to citizens they serve.
The unsatisfactory image of civil servants in China
has often affected the trust of ordinary Chinese for the government, he said.
Some never use "please" or "thank you" in conversations with the citizens they
work for.
"It's obvious to notice the gap between Chinese civil
servants and their counterparts in Japan, Korea and western countries," Liu
said. "Lots of things remain to be done on the image of our civil servants
before they face bigger tests, such as the Beijing Olympics."
Shen Dan, a woman deputy to the National People's
Congress from South China's Guangdong Province, has even proposed nationwide
education on manners and etiquette for all public servants. "Some are not even
ashamed of their poor manners because they can't tell what is proper from what
is not."
Zhejiang Province and several other provinces in
south China have already applied such etiquette regulations to civil servants in
recent years.
Scholars say the reason behind the careless dressing
for civil servants in China lies in the outdated idea that too much attention on
the appearance for public servants is "simply decadent."
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