China ends one-child policy after 35 years
China has scrapped its one-child policy, allowing all couples to have two children for the first time since draconian family planning rules were introduced more than three decades ago.
The announcement
followed a four-day Communist party summit in Beijing where China’s top leaders
debated financial reforms and how to maintain growth at a time of heightened
concerns over the economy.
China will “fully
implement a policy of allowing each couple to have two children as an active
response to an ageing population”, the party said in a statement published by
Xinhua, the official news agency.
“The change of policy
is intended to balance population development and address the challenge of an
ageing population,” the statement added.
Some celebrated the
move as a positive step towards greater personal freedom in China. But human
rights activists and critics said the loosening – which means the Communist
party continues to control the size of Chinese families – did not go far
enough.
“The state has no
business regulating how many children people have,” said William Nee, a Hong
Kong-based activist for Amnesty International.
guardian.
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