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BEIJING, Jan. 4 -- As Spring Festival draws near,
migrant workers are heading home for family reunions after a year of hard work.
But for some of them, the happy moment is shadowed with a sense of suspicion
over the fidelity of their long-separated spouses.
This explains the rising number
of paternity tests at this time of the year.
"We are always busiest during the run-up to Spring
Festival," said Cui Yugui, head of the Paternity Test Centre affiliated to
Jiangsu Provincial People's Hospital. "It is the peak time for paternity tests."
According to Cui, the centre has received more than
10 requests a day since mid-November, as compared to two or three each day
normally.
About 90 per cent of those who bring their children
for tests are fathers. "Some are sceptical about their newborn babies," said
Cui.
"They (the migrant workers) are separated from their
spouses for a large part of the year. They don't earn much, but they choose to
spend a lot on the test. It is such a pity," said Cui.
Cui said his centre conducted about 500 tests around
Spring Festival last year, of which 350 were requested by fathers who had worked
in separate cities from their wives.
A survey done by the centre showed that 78 per cent
of those seeking the tests suspected that their wives had been engaged in
extramarital affairs when they were away working.
"Mothers are generally reluctant to come. When a
mother turns up, she is often a single mother who wants to get evidence to find
out the biological father of the child so she can demand compensation," said
Cui.
According to Cui, 80 per cent of the tests they have
done since they began in 2001 have shown positive results, proving the
suspicious father is the biological father of the baby.
Cui's centre is one of three paternity test
institutions certificated by authorities in Nanjing, capital of Jiangsu Province
in East China.
Paternity test centres nationwide have also reported
similar increases in test requests during festival season.
There are more than 100 officially authorized
institutions in the country conducting paternity tests. The accuracy rate is
estimated at 99.9 per cent, said Cui.
"It is a sign of an increasingly open society," he
said.
However, for Wu Zebin, a researcher at the Sociology
Department of Peking University, the increasing number of paternity tests shows
that people are facing a trust crisis.
"In such a fast-changing society, people no longer
trust each other, even though they are husband and wife," said Wu.
Zhang Yan, a teacher at Nanjing University, said: "A
paternity test can't solve the problem. Even if it gives a positive result, the
mutual trust between the couple has been damaged."
Cui said his centre often warns the parents of the
possible consequences before the test and persuades them not to conduct it.
"If they insist, we will keep their profile
confidential," said Cui.
People often chose hospitals in other cities in order
not to run into acquaintances when taking the test, he added. Enditem
(Source: China Daily) |