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BEIJING, Nov. 2 -- A landmark initiative to abolish
the division between "rural residents" and "urban residents" is being developed
by 11 Chinese provinces.
The reforms are expected to grant people from rural areas all the political, educational and social security
benefits as their urban counterparts.
Pilot provinces include Liaoning in Northeast China,
Shandong and Fujian in East China, and Guangdong in South China.
Guangdong will allow all farmers to register as urban
residents in one or two years, Ou Guangyuan, deputy secretary of the Guangdong
Provincial Committee of the Communist Party of China, said on Monday at a work
conference.
Liaoning is also to wipe out differences between
urban and rural residence permits, granting the latter the same rights to
education, employment and medical care.
"Liaoning's urbanization is comparatively advanced
and we have many small cities which have the ability to absorb possible new
residents from the countryside," an official, surnamed Li from Liaoning Public
Security Department, said yesterday.
Shaanxi Province in Northwest China has also
announced it will abolish the urban-rural division within the next five years.
Earlier, Deputy Minister of Public Security Liu
Jinguo said reforms will help usher in a unified management system on permanent
residence registration.
However, public security experts are still calling
for a cautious attitude to reform, saying random steps will lead to chaos.
Bian Haihong of the Beijing Public Security Bureau
said yesterday that there are four areas which need special attention.
Education. More children will be vying for limited
places in city schools.
Healthcare. Can the government afford to foot the new
urban dwellers' medical bills?
Social security. Can local governments afford the
newcomers' social security demands?
Public order. If the system is adopted too quickly, a
huge influx of people living in poverty could spark a rise in crime.
In November 2001, Zhengzhou, capital of Central
China's Henan Province, offered free permanent registration permits to people
with relatives already living in the city. Increased pressure on transport,
education, healthcare and a rise in crime forced the city to cancel the measure
three years later, said Bian.
So far, most large cities are similarly unprepared
for a rapid transfer, he added.
(Source: China Daily) |