A bill to protect farmers' rights has hit the statute books for the
first time.
The Standing Committee of the 10th National People's Congress (NPC)
has started drafting legislation to guarantee farmers see real
benefit from State policies and get their interests protected.
It
is the first time farmers have been singled out in this way.
The NPC Agricultural and Rural Affairs Committee has started the
draft.
Dang Guoying, a professor with the Rural Development Institute
under the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said all legislation
on the rights and interests of citizens already applies to farmers
and in theory, such a bill is unnecessary.
But he said the imbalance in China between urban and rural areas
meant that improving the lot of farmers was vital if society was to
benefit in an 'all-round way'.
There are now 30 million poor people living in rural areas.
Top Chinese leaders have pledged to make overall plans for urban
and rural economic and social development, speed up urbanization,
modernize agriculture, develop the rural economy and increase
farmers' incomes.
But experts said the faster the pace of the ongoing urbanization
process in China, the more likely farmers' rights and interests
would take a back seat.
Dang said this bill was vital to the process.
"The bill will be good for maintaining stability in rural areas
because farmers are better equipped with legal knowledge to protect
their own interests," Dang said.
He
said the legislation will also ensure favorable State policies are
more effectively implemented.
Economist He Xinggang said the core aims of the current rural issue
lie in two aspects. One is to protect farmers' interests in terms
of agricultural production, the other is to give them equal status
with urban residents during the urbanization process.
"The fact that farmers' rights and interests have not been
effectively protected is the real cause of many problems," said
Wang Weizhong, a 66-year-old professor with Northeast China's Jilin
University and an NPC deputy, who first made a suggestion to that
effect in 1999.
In
a proposal to the NPC plenary session this year, Wang stressed the
importance of protecting migrant farmers, who "should be treated
the same as residents in such aspects as personal safety, workplace
injury, salary, children' education and access to State-sponsored
training".
"For decades, farmers working in cities have been suffering from
things like delayed payment and fraud. Premier Wen Jiabao has even
become involved helping an individual farmer gets paid," Wang
said.
Top legislator Wu Bangguo said lawmakers will pay more attention to
improving agriculture-related legislation and enforcing these
laws.
Three groups of legislators, led by three vice-chairs of the NPC
Standing Committee, conducted a month-long investigation into rural
affairs in 15 provinces and cities in April.
The committee reviewed three reports on the implementation of the
Law on Land Management, the country's agricultural policies and
financial services offered to farmers at the end of June.
Ren Dapeng, a professor with China Agricultural University, said
the bill is "necessary, appropriate and timely."
"We are now discussing the scope and subjects of the law, and the
household registration issue is one of the core issues," Ren
said.
Ren acknowledged that rights and interests related to land,
property, democracy, participation in social affairs, land
requisition, medical care, education, social security, employment
and other issues will be included in the new law.
(China Daily August 10, 2004)
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