BEIJING, Jan. 7 (Xinhua) -- Hubei Province, in
central China, has expelled 500 people from the Communist Party of China for
defying the "one-child" family planning policy.
Last year, the province found 93,084 people had
additional children in violation of the policy, including 1,678 officials or
Party members, according to the provincial family planning commission.
Also identified by the panel were seven national and
local lawmakers or political advisers. They lost their political status. Another
395 offenders were dismissed from their posts.
"More party members, celebrities, and well-off people
are violating the policies in recent years, which has undermined social
equality," said Yang Youwang, director of the commission.
He said a number of cases involving celebrities or
officials were still being investigated and the individuals would be identified
once their situation was verified.
Hubei Province has approved a regulation to shore up
family planning efforts. Under this rule, offenders are barred from government
employment for three years and cannot hold elective office or be political
advisers.
Separately, a ranking official in Tongnan County in
western Chongqing Municipality was sacked after he was found to have a second
child, aged 12. Ran Changjiang, an official with the local quality supervision
bureau, had a second son in 1995 but didn't include the child in his household
registration until 2005.
China's family planning policy was enacted in the
late 1970s to limit families to one child and encourage late marriages and
childbearing. The policy was codified as the Population and Family Planning Law,
which came into effect in September 2002.
A survey by the national family planning commission
has found that the majority of wealthy or well-known people had two children and
10 percent had three.