Chinese woman offers fertile' solution

The NPC, which is China's Parliament is due to hold its annual session from March 5.

Update: 2019-01-31 23:54 GMT
China's two-child policy implemented in 2016 has failed to make an impact on the country's low birth rate.

Beijing: A single Chinese woman has asked the law makers to legalise children of unmarried women to tide over the problem of low fertility rate haunting China, the world’s most populous nation, after the number of new-borns dropped by two million last year despite the government permitting two children since 2016.

China’s two-child policy implemented in 2016 has failed to make an impact on the country’s low birth rate as the number of new-borns dropped by two million last year in the world's most populous nation, recent figures from the National Bureau of Statistics revealed.

After China implemented the comprehensive two-child policy that allows all couples to have two children - abandoning its decades-long one-child policy - in 2016, the country’s health authority predicted that the fertility rate in 2017 and 2018 would be 1.97 and 2.09.

Zhang Ahlan (pseudonym), 27, from Beijing has proposed that children of unmarried women be legitimised which was strongly opposed by some experts, state-run Global Times reported on Thursday.

Zhang said that she sent letters to 64 deputies of the National People's Congress (NPC) saying they cannot freeze their eggs nor apply for a sperm from the sperm bank or use artificially assisted reproductive technology to get pregnant.

The letters sent by Zhang early this month to NPC Deputies were mostly from China's Jilin Province as Jilin is the only province in the country that officially allows unmarried women above legal age to get pregnant.

However, it is allowed under certain conditions, including having a Jilin household registration and remaining single for life. She is yet to receive a response, the report said.

The NPC, which is China's Parliament is due to hold its annual session from March 5.

Currently single Chinese women's right to give birth to children falls under the grey area of the law, the report said. In China, single women are deridingly called leftover women. According to unofficial figures, China has about 200 million single adults.

Zhang's proposal was opposed by experts, saying it is not responsible to their babies, the paper reported.    

Similar News