Retaining prime-age labor key to 'building new countryside'

By Wan Lixin
0 Comment(s)Print E-mail Shanghai Daily, February 13, 2012
Adjust font size:
 [By Zhou Tao/Shanghai Daily]

[By Zhou Tao/Shanghai Daily]



Children who have to grow up without their parents and parental guidance naturally command our compassion.

And when such absentee parenting and child rearing becomes more like a norm than an exception in parts of rural China, then this state of affairs should also command our fears.

Having known little parental affection and values-teaching, some become dangerous when they feel they have no limits and become aware of their own power for unchecked action, some of it violent.

Blogger Hong Qiaojun wrote recently that a migrant couple he knows asked him to buy two train tickets for them so they could rush back home.

Hong was puzzled, because the couple had just returned to the city after spending the Spring Festival at their home village.

The couple explained that their ne'er-do-well son back home had assaulted his grandmother after failing to get gambling money from her. The woman was hospitalized.

There are reports of similar assaults, some of them fatal.

The Guangzhou-based New Express Daily reported on January 31 of a tragic incident in a village in Guangzhou where a 15-year-old girl strangled her grandmother to death after failing to get money from her.

The young culprit then set the home on fire, trying to cover up the scene.

The girl had been brought up by the grandmother, her parents being divorced long ago.

A similar case occurred on October 9 in Leshan, Sichuan Province, where a 15-year-old boy killed both his grandparents so that he could make money by selling a dozen rabbits raised by the couple.

His migrant worker parents had left home when he was 4, leaving him in the custody of a relative.

It is hard to imagine such cruelty from children of a supposedly tender age normally associated with innocence, mirth and health.

Normal child development usually involves the presence of two loving parents, ideally an affectionate mother and an exacting father who together minister to the child's physical, mental and spiritual welfare.

Growing up without the benefit of reasonable reproaches, remonstrances, and rebukes, children easily grow up seeing themselves at the center of their universe and can easily become selfish, obdurate or cruel.

Sadly, tens of millions of rural children are now forced to essentially manage their childhood, adolescence and attendant problems on their own.

Due to a phenomenon vaguely described as "urbanization," a large number of villagers in their prime flock to cities in search of employment, leaving children, spouses or parents to somehow fend for themselves.

Their cheap labor and dedication are largely responsible for the "China miracle."

The number of left-behind children is not known. One estimate puts it at 20 million. A survey by the All-China Women's Federation estimated in 2005 there were 58 million, more than 40 million children under the age of 14.

China's lunar orbiter had just beamed back comprehensive lunar images that are believed to be the finest so far ("China has moon fully covered," February 7, Shanghai Daily).

Clearly, there is greater urgency to survey China's rural landscape.

In northern Jiangsu Province, which is relatively underdeveloped, left-behind children are said to account for 30 to 60 percent of all students in primary and middle schools.

'Living widows'

Many of these children have academic problems; some are prone to bullying and some are retiring, feeling insecure and timorous.

Some of them are forced to assume responsibilities far too heavy for their young shoulders.

Last October, many were shocked by an online photo showing a young girl primary school pupil sitting at a desk and holding her sleeping baby brother. The scene of one left-behind child tending another was taken in Fenghuang County, Hunan Province, but it sums up a nationwide problem.

Children are just part of the sacrifice.

1   2   Next  


Print E-mail Bookmark and Share

Go to Forum >>0 Comment(s)

No comments.

Add your comments...

  • User Name Required
  • Your Comment
  • Racist, abusive and off-topic comments may be removed by the moderator.
Send your storiesGet more from China.org.cnMobileRSSNewsletter