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Law would raise bar for foster parents

2014-05-06 08:59 China Daily Web Editor: Wang Fan
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Xu Aixiang encourages her foster child, Wu Zhenfeng, to use his foot to hold chopsticks for dinner in their home in Taiyuan, Shanxi province. Wu was born without arms. Yan Yan / Xinhua

Xu Aixiang encourages her foster child, Wu Zhenfeng, to use his foot to hold chopsticks for dinner in their home in Taiyuan, Shanxi province. Wu was born without arms. Yan Yan / Xinhua

Caregivers may be subject to criminal penalty for abuse of child

Foster parents will face harsher punishments, including criminal penalties, if they are found abusing children under their care, according to a draft law published by the State Council on its website.

The temporary caregivers can be held criminally liable if they seek illegal profits from the children they shelter, or if they abuse them or seriously violate the child's rights, according to the draft, which revises regulations governing foster families.

The current rules expose violators to fines and administrative penalties, but not criminal sanctions.

Public comment about the proposed law is being solicited until June 5.

Compared with the current regulation that took effect in 2004, the draft proposes a five-step procedure for applicants to become foster parents, and it sets up stricter standards for qualification.

The draft also stipulates that the only couples who may apply are those with no children younger than 6 years. Also, a foster family may take care of two children at most, one fewer than the current rule.

Li Yan, head of the Zhengzhou Child Welfare Home in Henan province, said that about 200 of her institution's 800 children are living with foster families because the organization cannot provide enough beds.

The welfare home has chosen couples from two nearby villages as foster parents, and social workers have made regular visits since 2009, Li said. Every foster family gets a monthly subsidy of about 900 yuan ($144).

Dong Hui, deputy director of the department of social welfare and philanthropy at the Henan Bureau of Civil Affairs, said local child welfare institutions resort to foster families when they are understaffed or do not have enough beds.

In Henan, about one-fifth of the 6,000 children under the State's care are living with foster families, she said.

Wang Jinxia, an official from the child welfare division of the Ministry of Civil Affairs, said China has been using foster families for years as an effective way to create a family for children.

"Returning home is the best way for children to grow, and with foster families they can feel they have parents," she said.

But the number of foster families has declined in some regions.

Beijing's Daxing district saw the number of children in foster families decline from 1,100 in 2006 to 110, Beijing Times reported on Monday.

Wang said a decline was also seen in other parts of the country. Most children in welfare homes in recent years were abandoned by their birth parents because of severe disease or disability, Wang said.

"Disabled children are not suitable for living in foster families as they usually require intense rehabilitation exercises, assisted by professional caregivers," she said.

China had 615,000 orphans under State care by the end of 2012, according to the Ministry of Civil Affairs.

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