BEIJING , China, May 26, 2008

"One-Child" Rule Eased For Quake Victims

China Will Offer Exemptions To Families Whose Child Was Killed, Disabled Or Severely Injured In Earthquake

  • Play CBS Video Video China's Quake Victims Recover

    Victims of the recent earthquake in China's Sichuan province are now recovering from extensive injuries. As Celia Hatton reports, many victims must now battle emotional as well as physical scars.

  • Video China Mourns Quake Victims

    Sirens whaled across China signaling the start of a three day period of mourning, as the death toll from the killer earthquake topped 34,000. Celia Hatton reports.

  • Video China Opens Doors To Aid

    China's unprecedented cooperation with its old rival, Japan, shows the toll the earthquake has taken is more than China can bear alone. Celia Hatton reports.

  • Relatives grieve over the photo of a child killed in an earthquake at the Fuxin No.2 Primary School in Wufu, in China's southwest Sichuan province, May 23, 2008. Parents of the 200 children who died when the school collapsed in an earthquake on May 12 are demanding an investigation into alleged shoddy construction.

    Relatives grieve over the photo of a child killed in an earthquake at the Fuxin No.2 Primary School in Wufu, in China's southwest Sichuan province, May 23, 2008. Parents of the 200 children who died when the school collapsed in an earthquake on May 12 are demanding an investigation into alleged shoddy construction.  (AP Photo/Greg Baker)

  • Photo Essay China Grieves

    Death toll over 50,000; tens of thousands still trapped or missing after quake.

  • Photos Quake Ravages China

    Images of the destruction and efforts to rescue those trapped in the rubble.

(CBS/AP)  China is relaxing its one-child policy for victims of the country's earthquake, giving some solace to grieving parents whose offspring were killed or maimed.

Couples whose only child was killed, severely injured or disabled in the quake can get a certificate allowing them to have another child, the Chengdu Population and Family Planning Committee, which oversees the policy in the capital of hard-hit Sichuan province, said Monday.

The May 12 quake was extra painful to many Chinese because it killed so many only children. The destruction of almost 7,000 classrooms during a school day left China heartbroken, with newspaper photos focusing on piles of dusty book bags and small hands emerging from the debris.

The earthquake has killed more than 65,000 people so far, and with more than 23,000 missing the toll is expected to keep rising. Officials say they haven't been able to estimate the number of children killed.

With so many broken families asking questions, the Chengdu committee is clarifying existing one-child policy guidelines to make them specific to quake victims, said a committee official who gave only his surname, Wang.

"There are just a lot of cases now," he said.

Chen Xueyun is one of them. His 8-year-old son, Weixi, was killed when the family's apartment in Qingchuan collapsed. Chen said he searched three days before finding the boy's body. He wears his son's blue plastic watch, as a reminder.

Chen said Monday's announcement could offer some parents some hope - after their grief subsides.

"If they are still sad and depressed, it's impossible to talk about another baby," he said. "But in the future, it could be quite helpful for them."

In the town of Jiangyou, beach tents are being used to house the homeless, reports CBS News reporter Celia Hatton. But Lin Zhenyan and her husband aren't complaining because at least they have each other; they lost their friends and their neighbors in just a few minutes when a landslide buried their home.

"We don't expect much more than shelter from the sun and the rain," she says.

Monday's announcement affects the city of Chengdu, which has 10 million people, as well as two of the hardest-hit cities nearby, Dujiangyan and Pengzhou. The committee plans to help about 1,200 of the worst-hit families, but that number could change, Wang said.

It wasn't clear whether other cities in the quake zone, including Qingchuan, would make similar announcements. A woman answering phones at the Sichuan provincial family planning office said officials are studying the issue. She didn't give her name, as is common in China.

China's one-child policy was launched in the late 1970s to control China's exploding population and ensure better education and health care. The law includes certain exceptions for ethnic groups, rural families and families where both parents are only children.

The government says the policy has prevented an additional 400 million births, but critics say it has also led to forced abortions, sterilizations and a dangerously imbalanced sex ratio as local authorities pursue sometimes severe birth quotas set by Beijing and families abort girls out of a traditional preference for male heirs.

The announcement offers a glimpse into the strict workings of the one-child system.

Couples who have more than one child are commonly punished by fines. The announcement says that if a child born illegally was killed in the quake, the parents will no longer have to pay fines for that child - but the previously paid fines won't be refunded.

If a couple's legally born child was killed and the couple is left with an illegally born child under the age of 18, that child can be registered as the legal child - an important move that gives the child previously denied rights including nine years of free compulsory education.

Many Chinese have shown interest in adopting earthquake orphans, and Monday's announcement says there are no limits on the number a family can adopt. A couple that adopts won't be penalized if they later have their own biological child.

Chen said he would like to have another child, but he hasn't spoken about it with his wife.

"She doesn't have good health, and she's afraid it would be dangerous to have another pregnancy, so I don't dare talk about it," he said. "She asked me if we could adopt a quake orphan, but I told her we should talk about it later."

© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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Add a Comment See all 29 Comments
by keithle1 May 28, 2008 9:27 AM EDT
Find me an American who will work for the wages of the average Chinese factory slave.
Reply to this comment
by a-ji May 27, 2008 4:04 PM EDT
Buy American, or go without unless its absolutely necessary.
Posted by NonayaBiness

Can you name products that are truly made in America?
Reply to this comment
by minnick8-2009 May 27, 2008 2:33 PM EDT
Buy American, or go without unless its absolutely necessary.
Posted by NonayaBiness

I would love to buy American, but everything I pick up says, "Made in China."
Reply to this comment
by mommakat64 May 27, 2008 8:21 AM EDT
Da*n, I''m very sorry about these da**ed repeats. My comments don''t get on, so I hit it again. Especially, when my post is still in the box unsent. I''ve been on these things where they make you wait, but your post never makes it---they''re "checking out" your thoughts.

Oh well, sorry for the repeats. Maybe I just need more patience and trust...
Reply to this comment
by mommakat64 May 27, 2008 8:00 AM EDT
Historically, China, Japan, old united Korea and most other Asian nations have taken girl infants out and left them on a hill or such to die. Agrarian cultures worldwide have desired boys over girls because boys grow up to help in the fields. The more sons you have the more land you can farm. Europeans, and the cultures they have spread in the "new world",don''t murder their daughters. With the land that China has, it should have been able to feed it''s people, but the Communist form of government has never been successful in that area. And now that China is demanding that it''s farmers grow corn, and less rice, the Communistic way will cause it''s usual starvation way. Just like the Ukraine was able to feed Russia until Stalin destroyed that "bread basket" wheat growing nation because they wouldn''t go along with the "collective farming methods" of the Communist Party, and it spread all across the USSR--it has been found that collective farming doesn''t work, people starve. The various states/countries are not doing well..there''s nothing on the grocers'' shelves still. Farmers must believe that they can, at least, provide for their families selling the "extra", or they don''t farm, and we all will starve without our farmers providing FOOD to eat, not for our cars.
Reply to this comment
by mommakat64 May 27, 2008 7:58 AM EDT
Historically, China, Japan, old united Korea and most other Asian nations have taken girl infants out and left them on a hill or such to die. Agrarian cultures worldwide have desired boys over girls because boys grow up to help in the fields. The more sons you have the more land you can farm. Europeans, and the cultures they have spread in the "new world",don''t murder their daughters. With the land that China has, it should have been able to feed it''s people, but the Communist form of government has never been successful in that area. And now that China is demanding that it''s farmers grow corn, and less rice, the Communistic way will cause it''s usual starvation way. Just like the Ukraine was able to feed Russia until Stalin destroyed that "bread basket" wheat growing nation because they wouldn''t go along with the "collective farming methods" of the Communist Party, and it spread all across the USSR--it has been found that collective farming doesn''t work, people starve. The various states/countries are not doing well..there''s nothing on the grocers'' shelves still. Farmers must believe that they can, at least, provide for their families selling the "extra", or they don''t farm, and we all will starve without our farmers providing FOOD to eat, not for our cars.
Reply to this comment
by mommakat64 May 27, 2008 7:04 AM EDT
Historically, China, Japan, old united Korea and most other Asian nations have taken girl infants out and left them on a hill or such to die. Agrarian cultures worldwide have desired boys over girls because boys grow up to help in the fields. The more sons you have the more land you can farm. Europeans, and the cultures they have spread in the "new world",don''t murder their daughters. With the land that China has, it should have been able to feed it''s people, but the Communist form of government has never been successful in that area. And now that China is demanding that it''s farmers grow corn, and less rice, the Communistic way will cause it''s usual starvation way. Just like the Ukraine was able to feed Russia until Stalin destroyed that "bread basket" wheat growing nation because they wouldn''t go along with the "collective farming methods" of the Communist Party, and it spread all across the USSR--it has been found that collective farming doesn''t work, people starve. The various states/countries are not doing well..there''s nothing on the grocers'' shelves still. Farmers must believe that they can, at least, provide for their families selling the "extra", or they don''t farm, and we all will starve without our farmers providing FOOD to eat, not for our cars.
Reply to this comment
by mommakat64 May 27, 2008 7:01 AM EDT
Historically, China, Japan, old united Korea and most other Asian nations have taken girl infants out and left them on a hill or such to die. Agrarian cultures worldwide have desired boys over girls because boys grow up to help in the fields. The more sons you have the more land you can farm. Europeans, and the cultures they have spread in the "new world",don''t murder their daughters. With the land that China has, it should have been able to feed it''s people, but the Communist form of government has never been successful in that area. And now that China is demanding that it''s farmers grow corn, and less rice, the Communistic way will cause it''s usual starvation way. Just like the Ukraine was able to feed Russia until Stalin destroyed that "bread basket" wheat growing nation because they wouldn''t go along with the "collective farming methods" of the Communist Party, and it spread all across the USSR--it has been found that collective farming doesn''t work, people starve. The various states/countries are not doing well..there''s nothing on the grocers'' shelves still. Farmers must believe that they can, at least, provide for their families selling the "extra", or they don''t farm, and we all will starve without our farmers providing FOOD to eat, not for our cars.
Reply to this comment
by susanhelit May 27, 2008 6:59 AM EDT
This is not an unreasonable policy - it is a compassionate one. If China had allowed it''s population to keep exploding, people would be starving, rioting for food, because there are simply only so many people a bit of land can support, and they were already overpopulated when they started this policy. Continued large families would cause a larger disaster - and a manmade one.

This is the established policy - they''re just making sure the quake victims know about it.

If we had China''s population - would we allow individual choices to drive us to destruction, or infringe our freedoms? That''s the choice China had to make.
Reply to this comment
by michellem99-2009 May 27, 2008 6:09 AM EDT
I am an American..arr..A pitate..no sah..Maine born and raised. Dear the American govt has the power to dictate what it wants. Have ye forgot..They go thru every thing. That is the new America. It is not the America I grew up with. I hate it. It use to be ye could make them mind . The nanny govt. oh dear what a mess.
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