On Thursday, China’s largest series of political gatherings — known collectively as the “Two Sessions” — kicked off at Beijing’s cavernous Great Hall of the People. Nearly 3,000 delegates to the National People’s Congress (NPC), the country’s top legislature, plus over 2,100 members of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC), the country’s top political advisory body, descended on the capital for the weeklong event, where a variety of government policies and goals will be revealed.To get more Two Sessions 2021, you can visit shine news official website.
Delegates vote on and give feedback to key items on China’s political
agenda, but in practice new legislation is never turned down. But there
is sometimes genuine discussion, even controversy from the flurry of
policy proposals put forward by delegates themselves. These proposals
include issues ranging from healthcare and education to labor rights and
violence against minors and women. Although most of the ideas discussed
at the meetings are unlikely to be acted on soon, they offer a glimpse
into some of the most urgent social problems facing China at the moment.
On March 1, 2016, China implemented its first-ever anti-domestic
violence law. Designed to protect victims of intimate partner violence
or child abuse, the legislation was celebrated back then as a landmark
victory for women’s rights, as it not only allowed victims to seek
protection through legal procedures like restraining orders, but also
mandated education on the subject in schools and awareness efforts in
the media to end the social stigma surrounding those in abusive
relationships.
However, five years later, the law appears to be depressingly ineffective. Despite growing attention on the matter, victims of domestic violence — when trying to escape assault or holding their abusers accountable — still face a host of challenges, including poor enforcement of protection orders and lenient punishments for offenders.
Pinning the majority of the blame on public security organs, the
All-China Women’s Federation, a government-controlled and -funded
organization tasked with advancing women’s rights in the country, raised
a proposal (in Chinese) to integrate a special service hotline for
domestic violence reports into the 110 emergency number, which it hopes
will encourage earlier intervention from enforcement and more follow-up
on cases that need to be monitored.
Increasing healthcare access in rural areas
Although expanding China’s healthcare coverage to rural residents and
farmers is (something close to) a consensus position among delegates,
some argued for very particular new policies:.
CPPCC members Dài Xiùyīng and Xú Cóngjiàn lobbied for (in Chinese) a
human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination campaign for women in the
countryside, saying that because proper health checkups were a scarce
resource in rural regions, they were in more urgent need of HPV vaccines
and screening programs compared with their urban counterparts.
NPC delegate Chén Fèngzhēn argued that in China’s push to promote
regular physical checkups across the country, farmers should be
prioritized because people living with low incomes tend to have more
adverse health outcomes than others.
Establishing a minimum wage for food delivery drivers
Following a recent controversy surrounding Ele.me, China’s biggest food
delivery app, which was widely criticised for its treatment of drivers
during the Chinese New Year holiday, NPC delegate Xiāo Shèngfāng 肖胜方,
president of the Guangdong Lawyers Association, argued that food
delivery couriers should be entitled to a minimum wage, overtime pay,
and other benefits, like health insurance.
Xiao noted that because food delivery drivers were classified as independent contractors, they had no employee rights and were vulnerable to exploitation by delivery companies like Ele.me.
Xiao’s suggestion comes at a time when China’s booming ecommerce and food delivery industries are being forced to confront their mistreatment of workers after a spate of negative news and damning investigations.
The Wall