|
BEIJING, Sept. 8 -- Gender inequality still exists in
China, especially in poverty-stricken rural areas, a recent national study on
gender assessment learned.
Professor Li Xiaoyun of the College of Humanities and Development at China Agricultural University said on Tuesday
that although the status of Chinese women has improved greatly in the past two
decades, gender inequality still commonly exists in almost all social aspects
including political power, education, health, employment and assets possession.
Li made the comments in Beijing at a workshop on gender and poverty in China.
A study group led by Li earlier this year surveyed 10
villages in the poorest rural areas including Sichuan, Gansu, Shaanxi and
Jiangxi provinces, as well as the Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region.
"In poverty-stricken areas, men and women are quite
unequal in political rights," Li said. "Women are less involved in villager
autonomy elections and account for a very low percentage of the village
committee.
"Some male villagers think women cannot be leaders
because of their weak thinking capacity and physical condition. More important
is that women were not nominated in the election process."
As women have participated little in decision making,
with only 12.5 per cent of rural cadres being women, few women have received
training and benefits from village- level poverty reduction programmes, the
study found.
Jointly funded by the World Bank and the Asian
Development Bank, the study is part of a one-year study on gender assessment in
China that was launched in October last year.
More measures are expected, in order to reduce the
gender gap and enhance gender awareness among policy-makers, development project
planners and practitioners, said Shireen Lateef, principal gender specialist for
the bank.
"In light of the apparent gender inequality in East
Asia, the Asian Development Bank has promised to introduce a gender equality
strategy into every project and activity," Lateef said.
Women also have less decision-making power at home
and less chance of receiving education, nutrition and health care, the survey's
results indicated.
For example, Wang Xiulian, a 42-year-old resident of
Xingmin Village in Ningxia with no formal education, has to work long hours in
the vegetable greenhouse, which has made her suffer from severe asthma. Wang's
husband, who has a senior middle school education, is mainly responsible for
herding sheep.
The study also found that the prevalence of illness
rates in rural women is 5 per cent higher than in rural men. In the villages
surveyed, about 60 per cent of women suffered from a long-term illness, and
twice as many doctor visits were made by women compared with men.
Long work hours and poor nutrition and care after
childbirth are blamed as the two main reasons why women's illness rates are
higher.
In Houhe Village, Sichuan Province, more than 70 per
cent of women suffer from gynaecological illnesses. Many of the women who have
died of hysteritis in Panzhuang Village in Shaanxi in recent years were in their
30s.
While men try to find jobs that pay more
substantially, most farm work in recent years has fallen to women, meaning that
they are doing housework in addition to their labours outside, the survey found.
Guo Ju, 55, a resident of Xiaowang Village in Gansu
Province who cannot read or write, cooks, washes and cleans after finishing her
day's work on the farm. Guo's husband herds cows, and their four children have
left home to work in cities.
Guo had a quarrel with her husband during the wheat
harvesting recently. She said. "I asked my husband to help me, but he said his
job is just to herd the cows."
(Source: China Daily) |