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The consequences of violating China's one-child policy were sometimes horrific

Barbara Tasch   

The consequences of violating China's one-child policy were sometimes horrific
Home4 min read

China

AP Photo/Kin Cheung

A Chinese girl holds national flag as she and other fans watch the World Athletics Championships at the Bird's Nest stadium in Beijing, Saturday, Aug. 22, 2015.

The Chinese Communist Party said this week it's lifting its 35-year-old one-child policy and will now allow all couples to have two children.

While the world was aware of China's one-child policy, the actual consequences of violating it were opaque to many Westerners.

To be clear, not everybody in China had to comply with the policy.

In 2007, the Chinese newspaper China Daily claimed that less than 40% of the population was subjected to the policy.

Many minority groups were exempt from the one-child limit, according to China Daily. Moreover, many couples who were both only children were allowed to have two kids even during the era of the one-child policy.

Yet, the people who were subjected to the policy often received inhuman treatment when they broke it.

The methods used to enforce the policy ranged from the wide distribution of diverse contraceptive methods; financial sanctions; and forced abortions and sterilizations for those who did not comply, according to the Encyclopaedia Britannica.

In 2013, the Chinese government revealed that 336 million abortions and 196 million sterilizations had been performed since the early 1970s, when the country began moving to limit its population, according to the FT. (The one-child policy was officially put into place at the end of that decade.) The FT also reported that 403 million intrauterine devices had been inserted in women in that time, often forcefully.

A 2013 article for the Guardian by journalist Ma Jian exposes the harrowing treatment women in Bobai County in the Guangxi province were subjected to after local authorities "launched a vicious crackdown on family-planning violators" in 2007.

China

Associated Press

Military parade in China.

According to the article, 17,000 women in the county were forced to have abortions and sterilized. Local officials reportedly collected money even from families who had already been fined and looted the homes of those who did not have enough money to pay.

One of the women interviewed said officials took her from her home, kicked her in the belly, and forced her to go to the hospital - where her fetus was aborted and she was sterilized. Every women in the county was sterilized, she said.

An elderly Chinese woman walks past a poster in Guangzhou promoting China's first family planning law, August 31, 2002.

Reuters

An elderly Chinese woman walks past a poster in Guangzhou promoting China's first family planning law, August 31, 2002.

Another woman said she was forced to have an abortion when she was over eight months pregnant.

"He was still alive after the nurse pulled him out from me. He was a tough little creature. He clutched the nurse's sleeve and wouldn't let go. She had to peel his fingers off her one by one before she could drop him into the bin," the woman told Jian.

The crackdown led to the biggest protests China had seen since the unrest in Tiananmen Square in 1989. Thousands of protesters torched government buildings in Bobai County to fight against the crackdown, according to the Guardian.

Yet, China only apparently changed its policy because its population is aging and it needs an infusion of young people to sustain its economy.

Abandoning the policy will "increase labor supply and ease pressures from an aging population," the National Health and Family Planning Commission, which enforces the policy, said in a statement cited by The New York Times. "This will benefit sustained and healthy economic development," the commission said.

The struggle for reproductive freedom in China is not over yet, though. The Chinese government still allows just two children per couple, meaning the government will still be involved in some of its citizens' most intimate choices.

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