Chinese non-governmental
organizations (NGOs) are demanding more care and attention from the
government and the public, said a speaker at the ongoing 21st
Century Forum in Beijing.
About 60 percent of local NGOs each
work on an annual budget of less than 20,000 yuan (about US$1,340),
and only five percent of them work in cooperation with
international organizations, Wang Ming, a professor of Tsinghua
University, said quoting a survey.
In the wake of a shift in government
functions, the government should give full play to the role of
NGOs, said Wang, who is also a member of the National Committee of
the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference
(CPPCC).
According to official figures
provided by the Ministry of Civil Affairs, the number of NGOs in
China has increased from 6,000 in 1978 to 142,000 in 2003. The
amount of donations handled by NGOs' each year accounts for 0.05
percent of China's gross domestic product (GDP).
In comparison, the United States has
more than 1.5 million NGOs, which handle donations equivalent to 8
percent of its GDP.
NGO's successes in the last few
decades show that they can play a big role in areas such as
poverty-relief and environmental protection.
Participants in the forum urged the
government to reform its management over NGOs by giving up the
existing "overlapped management mechanism", which puts them under
the management and supervision of both registration departments and
their "owners".
According to law, an NGO has to find
an "owner" before it applies for registration, which has made NGO
establishment in China difficult, the participants said, adding
that local NGOs still lack legal status and function.
(Xinhua News Agency September 7,
2005)
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