Top Official: “China Must Unwaveringly Adhere to the One Child Policy”

Beijing.  A top family planning official dashed hopes that the One Child Policy will be abolished, or even modified significantly, any time soon. “We must unwaveringly adhere to the One Child Policy as a national policy to stabilize the low birth rate as the primary task,” stated Wang Xia, Chairman the National Population and Family Planning Commission, at a national conference on January 14.

Wang Xia further stated, “We need to keep the One-child policy and keep the national birth rate low . . . It’s our priority.”

Chinese national media quoted expert opinions that “the current low birthrate is not stable, except for a few very advanced major cities.  In most areas of the nation, if they were to give up the One Child Policy, the current low birthrate would definitely rebound significantly. Therefore, in order to stabilize the low birthrate, it is necessary to hold on to the One Child Policy as a basic national policy,” according to a Zhong Xin China News Agency report.

Wang’s announcement came amidst criticisms by demographer Gu Baochang and statistician Ma Jiantang, that the declines in the labor force due to the Policy are endangering China’s economic future.  Ma Jiantang added that China should look into “an appropriate and scientific family planning policy,” according to a Reuters report.

Reggie Littlejohn, President of Women’s Rights Without Frontiers, stated, “Gu Baochang and Ma Jiantang join a growing chorus of critics of the One Child Policy.  The fact that criticism is growing does not warrant jumping to the conclusion that the policy is at an end.

“Such critics generally do not mention human rights abuses as the reason for reform.  Nor do they advocate abolition of the policy, but rather gradual modification by transitioning to a two-child policy.  Their concern is for the potentially devastating, long-term economic and demographic consequences of the policy.”

“The central issue in the One Child Policy is not whether the government allows couples to have one or two children.  Rather, it is the coercion with which this limit is enforced.  Even with a two-child policy, women will still be subject to forced abortion if they get pregnant without a birth permit.

“Also, a two-child policy fails to discourage gendercide, the sex-selective abortion of baby girls.  In areas where couples can have a second child if the first is a girl, gendercide is rampant.”

Littlejohn concluded, “Wang Xia’s strong pronouncement should end speculation that China will abandon the One Child Policy in the foreseeable future.  Forced abortion up to the ninth month of pregnancy, and gendercide – the sex-selective abortion of baby girls – will continue until all coercive birth limits are abolished.  We at Women’s Rights Without Frontiers are dismayed by this news, but will redouble our efforts to end this hideous crime against humanity.”

Sign a petition against forced abortion in China:

http://www.womensrightswithoutfrontiers.org/index.php?nav=sign_our_petition

Watch a 4-minute video, Stop Forced Abortion, China’s War on Women

Stop Forced Abortion – China’s War on Women! Video (4 mins)

http://www.womensrightswithoutfrontiers.org/?nav=stop-forced-abortion

Read a translation of the Zhong Xin China News Agency report:

http://www.womensrightswithoutfrontiers.org/blog/?p=904

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment

Chinese Official Plans to Keep the One Child Policy, Says Maintaining Low Birth Rate is a Priority

The following is a translation of an article that appeared in the Zhong Xin China News Agency on January 14, 2013.

Chinese Official Plans to Keep the One Child Policy, Says Maintaining Low Birth Rate is a Priority

Reporters: Ou Yang and Kai Yu

Beijing.  “We must unwaveringly adhere to the One Child Policy as a national policy to stabilize the low birth rate as the primary task,” stated Wang Xia, Chairman of the National Population and Family planning Commission.

The National Population and Family planning Commission released the news on the evening of January 14. Wang Xia said at a national conference of that organization, that among their four major tasks of 2013, “We need to keep the One-child policy and keep the national birth rate low, and then improve the policy gradually. … It’s our priority.”

The Chinese national media quoted the experts’ opinions, saying that the current low birthrate is not stable, except for a few very advanced major cities.  In most areas of the nation, if they were to give up the One Child Policy, the current low birthrate would definitely rebound significantly. Therefore, in order to stabilize the low birth rate, it is necessary to hold on to the One Child Policy as a basic national policy.

In the demographers’ opinion, “improving the policy” mainly refers to the consideration that to achieve the low birth rate, the overall relationships among the population, the population’s quality, structure and distribution should be considered, building a dynamic adjustment mechanism for rewards and assistance, and building the basic public service system for population planning.

At the January 14 meeting, Wang also mentioned that it is necessary to enhance the overall grass-root level work in cities, according to the situation that large numbers of youth from the countryside are working in the cities.  It is also necessary to build and improve the work system, improve the overall work methods, and implement management measures for population planning.

Wang Xia demands that it is necessary to put great effort into resolving the realistic difficulties and problems for the people and the families who are executing the One Child Policy.

Read the original article in Chinese:

The following is a translation of an article that appeared in the Zhong Xin China News Agency on January 14, 2013

Chinese Official Plans to Keep the One Child Policy, Says Maintaining Low Birth Rate is a Priority

Reporters: Ou Yang and Kai Yu

Beijing.  “We must unwaveringly adhere to the One Child Policy as a national policy to stabilize the low birth rate as the primary task,” stated Wang Xia, Chairman of the National Population and Family planning Commission.

The National Population and Family planning Commission released the news on the evening of January 14. Wang Xia said at a national conference of that organization, that among their four major tasks of 2013, “We need to keep the One-child policy and keep the national birth rate low, and then improve the policy gradually. … It’s our priority.”

The Chinese national media quoted the experts’ opinions, saying that the current low birthrate is not stable, except for a few very advanced major cities.  In most areas of the nation, if they were to give up the One Child Policy, the current low birthrate would definitely rebound significantly. Therefore, in order to stabilize the low birth rate, it is necessary to hold on to the One Child Policy as a basic national policy.

In the demographers’ opinion, “improving the policy” mainly refers to the consideration that to achieve the low birth rate, the overall relationships among the population, the population’s quality, structure and distribution should be considered, building a dynamic adjustment mechanism for rewards and assistance, and building the basic public service system for population planning.

At the January 14 meeting, Wang also mentioned that it is necessary to enhance the overall grass-root level work in cities, according to the situation that large numbers of youth from the countryside are working in the cities.  It is also necessary to build and improve the work system, improve the overall work methods, and implement management measures for population planning.

Wang Xia demands that it is necessary to put great effort into resolving the realistic difficulties and problems for the people and the families who are executing the One Child Policy.

Read the original article in Chinese:

http://www.chinanews.com/gn/2013/01-15/4487037.shtml

Posted in abortion, China, One Child Policy, pro-choice, pro-life, Uncategorized | 2 Comments

Last Chance to “Save a Girl” in China This Year!

Here’s what gets me out of bed in the morning – knowing that there are babies in China who are alive today, who would have been aborted or abandoned it weren’t for help from Women’s Rights Without Frontiers.

Do you want to help save lives in China?  Here is your chance!  Join our “Save a Girl” Campaign!

http://womensrightswithoutfrontiers.org/index.php?nav=end-gendercide-and-forced-abortion

Let me tell you about one of the babies WRWF has saved:

Baby Liu’s family already has a daughter.  They live in the countryside where you can have a second child if your first is a girl.  Most families want a boy for the second child and many have abortions if they find out they are carrying a second girl.  Baby Liu’s parents are very poor farmers.  When they found out that Baby Liu was a girl, they planned to abort her.  A WRWF Field Worker found out about Baby Liu and offered to help the family by giving them a monthly stipend for one year, to keep their daughter.  They decided not to abort, and Baby Liu was born in October!  When our Field Worker visited the family, the mother was all smiles about her beautiful new daughter.  She saved red eggs (a sign of good luck) for our Field Worker and thanked WRWF for saving her daughter’s life!

There are so many more babies we have saved through “Save a Girl.”  You too can have the satisfaction of knowing that you are making a life and death difference for one of the most vulnerable people on earth – a Chinese baby girl.

Here’s the link to our “Save a Girl” Campaign page.  Thanks so much for your generosity!

http://womensrightswithoutfrontiers.org/index.php?nav=end-gendercide-and-forced-abortion

Posted in abortion, China's One Child Policy, coerced abortion, Forced Abortion, gendercide, One Child Policy, pro-choice, pro-life, Save a Girl, Women's Rights Without Frontiers | Tagged | Comments Off on Last Chance to “Save a Girl” in China This Year!

Int’l Human Rights Day, Open Letter to Chinese President Xi Demands Immediate End to Forced Abortion

In honor of International Human Rights Day (December 10) Women’s Rights Without Frontiers has joined other human rights organizations, including The Jubilee Campaign and the Justice Foundation, in an open letter to new Chinese President Xi Jinping, demanding the end of forced abortion and sterilization in China.  WRWF President Reggie Littlejohn said, “Forced abortion and the insidious infrastructure of coercion necessary to enforce China’s One Child Policy do not just affect women.  They affect everyone in China.  The coercive enforcement of China’s One Child Policy is the biggest human rights violation on earth today – a bloody stranglehold on 1.3 billion people.  It must end now.  We call upon President Xi Jinping to give hope to the suffering people of China by ending these barbaric practices as his first and most lasting legacy.”

The Open Letter follows:

Dear President Xi Jinping:

As you know, we are currently in the 33rd year of the official institution of China’s brutal One Child Policy, which has caused incalculable suffering to millions of women and families of China.  As many within your country, as well as many of us in the international community are saying to you, it is time for this policy to end, not to be replaced by a ‘two-child policy’ as some of your advisors may be suggesting, but to be eradicated from the face of the earth because it has caused more violence toward women and girls than any other official policy on earth, and any other official policy in the history of the world by coercively preventing more than 400 million births through forced abortions, sterilizations, confiscatory fines, and infanticide – all in violation of international norms.

Instituting a two-child policy will not end gendercide. Indeed, areas in which two children currently are allowed are especially vulnerable to gendercide, the sex-selective abortion of females.  According to the 2009 British Medical Journal study of 2005 national census data, in nine Chinese provinces, for “second order births” where the first child is a girl, 160 boys were born for every 100 girls. In two provinces, Jiangsu and Anhui, for the second child, there were 190 boys for every hundred girls born. This study stated, “Sex selective abortion accounts for almost all the excess males.”  Because of this gendercide, there are an estimated 37 million Chinese men who will never marry because their future wives were terminated before they were born. This gender imbalance is a powerful, driving force behind trafficking in women and sexual slavery, not only in China, but in neighboring nations as well.

As a respected leader with a reported reputation for investigating government corruption, we commend your attention to the corrupt practices that have completely infiltrated the implementation of the One Child Policy so that today its only practical purpose is to line the pockets of Chinese family planning officials charged with implementing the policy with ill-gotten gains despite the death, suffering, personal injury, destitution and corruption this policy has sown into the stories of so many millions of Chinese lives.

For example, earlier this year, Feng Jianmei (pictured here), was forcibly aborted at seven months when she and her husband, Deng Jiyuan, could not pay a 40,000 yuan fine ($6300). Officials of Ankang City, Shaanxi Province, tried to force Feng into a car, but she escaped to her aunt’s house.  They broke through the gate, so she fled to the mountains, where officials found her hiding under a bed.  After forcibly aborting her baby, officials laid the bloody body of her dead daughter next to her in the bed.  The story and photograph immediately went viral, sent shockwaves around the world, and ignited a firestorm of outrage.  To quell the international outrage, we understand compensation is being paid but the pain is permanent.

Our hearts go out to the victims of forced abortion and their families.  The coercive enforcement of China’s cruel and barbaric One Child Policy causes more violence towards women and girls than any other official policy on earth.  It is China’s war against women and girls. Women are forcibly aborted up to the ninth month of pregnancy.  Forced abortion is not a choice.  It is systematic, institutionalized violence against women, official government rape; and it continues to this day.  We urge you to put an end to this hideous crime against humanity, which in many instances also constitutes torture in violation of China’s international obligations.[1]

Feng Jianmei is not alone.  Several other cases of coercion have emerged in the past eighteen months:

On October 2, 2012, Ms. Song, a pregnant mother of two, was alone at her home in Heilizhai, Shandong. As reported by her husband, Mr. Qiao, she had heard nothing from the local family planning office and assumed she would safely deliver her third child since she was six months pregnant. But at 5pm, seven family planning officials arrived and pulled her into a van against her will. They drove her 100 km away to the Dongying Universal Love Women’s Hospital. There, officials confiscated her cell phone and stripped her clothing when she tried to resist. They injected her with a sedative, pressed her finger to a “consent form,” then injected a chemical solution into her womb to induce a coerced late-term abortion. Afterwards, officials locked Ms. Song inside the hospital and neglected to return her clothes to her. She had to remain at the hospital alone until she delivered her stillborn baby on October 5. Mr. Qiao says he was furious. He knew that local officials had defied the Chinese government’s recently reported ban on late-term forced abortion: “My wife was definitely six months pregnant.” Initial reports indicated that the family planning officials in Heilizhai were trying to cover up the story. Mr. Qiao says, “The officials threatened us and said they would pay us 30,000 RMB ($4,800), but they haven’t given us anything, Instead they asked me what kind of trouble I was trying to cause. I feel this is not right.” On November 2, it was reported by Mr. Qiao that he has now received 40,000 RMB from the government–but further notes that no officials had yet been punished.

Lijing County, Shandong Province. October 12, 2011.  Jihong Ma died during a forced abortion, six months pregnant.  Due to the trauma of being seized by Family Planning Officials, she had been placed on oxygen.  In the words of a family member:

“More than ten persons from the Family Planning Bureau came, took off the oxygen mask from her and forced her to induce labor. From the time she was put into operating room at 4:00 p.m., there was no news about her . . . At night around 10:00 p.m., someone came, opened the door of the delivery room and slipped away. We ran into the delivery room and saw that the doctors and nurses all disappeared while poor Jihong Ma’s body had already been totally freezing cold, with purple lips and bleeding nose, lying on the operating table without any movement.”

Linyi City, Shandong Province. March 2012.  A photo of a forcibly aborted full term baby drowned in a bucket, submitted anonymously, circulated on Weibo, the Chinese version of Twitter, and in the West.  The infant reportedly cried at birth, but was drowned in a bucket by family planning personnel.

Huangqiao Town, Jishui County, Jiangxi Province. March 2012.  A 46-year-old woman was forcibly sterilized, in retaliation for bringing a petition. The woman posted the following account on the internet:

On March 14, my husband was being escorted back from making a petition.  To retaliate for his petition, the town government sent more than 20 strong men.  I could no longer give birth to a child at that time, but they still dragged my legs, treated me like an animal, and forcibly performed a tubal ligation on the operating table of the Family Planning Office.  Guoqing Luo (the Deputy Town Secretary) also exclaimed, “The Government takes the consequences!  The Government has the money!”

Hu Jia, Jianli County, Hubei Province. June 19, 2012.  China’s Southern Metropolis Daily reported that Hu Jia was forcibly aborted at nearly eight months.  This case was reported by a major Chinese newspaper, indicating the growing discontent with the policy inside China and the courage of the Chinese news media to report it.[2]

Chen Guangcheng. Not only are women and the fathers of their children oppressed by the One Child Policy, so are those who try to defend them.  Blind activist lawyer Chen Guangcheng exposed the widespread and systematic use of forced abortions and involuntary sterilizations in Linyi County in 2005.  The Chinese Communist Party imprisoned Chen for four years and three months.  They then kept him and his family under strict house arrest from September, 2010 until his dramatic escape.  Chen arrived in the United States on May 19, 2012.  Just last week Chen released a video that is currently going viral on the internet.  In it, Chen explains how human rights are ignored in China in violation of Chinese and international law.  He further confirms that he has endured incalculable suffering for human rights in China, and in particular, for the rights of women not to be forcibly aborted or sterilized.  He has confirmed that these barbaric practices are still being used ‘extensively.’  Indeed, he has taken a bold step in declaring that the violence against women and babies committed in connection with the coercive enforcement of the One Child Policy ‘is a sin, because, in Chen’s words, “life is sacred.’”

Catastrophic Financial Penalties. Forced abortion and sterilization are not the only way that the One Child Policy devastates families.  The often excessive fines paid by couples to save an “out of plan” pregnancy are used to line the pockets of family planning and other officials.  These fines can reach up to ten times a person’s annual salary.  Job loss is another form of financial coercion and can be catastrophic.  In March 2012, the head of the Chemistry Department at Renmin University in Beijing jumped to his death because he was accused of having a second child and threatened with being “discharged from public employment.” Meanwhile, officials are promoted or demoted based on whether they meet birth, abortion and sterilization quotas.

On July 4, 012, the European Parliament voted to pass a resolution “on the forced abortion scandal” in China condemning forced abortion and gendercide in China. The European Parliament’s resolution pointed to the one-child policy as a major factor in human rights abuses in China: “The European Parliament…condemns the practice of forced abortions and sterilizations globally, especially in the context of the one-child policy,” said the final joint resolution.[3] More specifically, the resolution “strongly condemns the decision to force Ms. Feng to have an abortion and condemns the practice of forced abortions and sterilizations globally, especially in the context of the one-child policy.”  The resolution further states that “the EU has provided, and still provides, funds for organizations involved in family planning policies in China,” and “urges the Commission to ensure that its funding of projects does not breach” the European Parliament’s commitment against coercive population control.

In the wake of the case of Feng Jianmei, a group of scholars and entrepreneurs in China have issued an open letter calling upon the government to change the One-Child Policy. Businessman James Liang said, “From an economic perspective, the one-child policy is irrational. From a human rights perspective, it’s even less rational.”

Even your experts from China’s Development Research Foundation are reported to be warning you “If China sticks to the one-child policy, we are looking at a situation as bad as the one in southern Europe. Old people will make up a third of the population by 2050.”

We acknowledge reports that family planning officials are being asked to “absolutely stop late-term abortions” and “guide people to do family planning voluntarily.”  Unfortunately, it appears from Ms. Song’s case and many others that these cosmetic steps, even if true and insufficient and are being ignored with impunity. A ban is only effective if it is enforced, and the seven Family Planning officials who forcibly aborted Ms. Song’s baby have committed a serious crime. If you value the rule of law, those officials who flouted the law should be punished and stripped of their authority. The family of Qiao Ping’an and Ms. Song should be honored through a public apology.

Moreover, justice should be given to the many other women who have suffered because of the One-Child Policy.  Just as China has rightfully demanded an apology from Japan for the atrocities committed during World War II, so also are these wronged women deserving of an apology and appropriate compensation for what they suffered under the One-Child Policy.

You may say it is impossible to regulate local officials who violate the rule against late term forced abortions. This is true—it might be impossible to prevent horrible stories like Feng Jianmei’s or Ms. Song’s as long as the One-Child Policy continues. For this reason, we call upon you to ending the One-Child Policy completely.  The unbelievably high fines that are imposed on ordinary Chinese citizens for breaking the One-Child Policy are well publicized . We believe that corrupt officials will continue to harm women as long as these fines—incentives to corruption—remain in place.

President Jinping, you are in a unique position to stop this horrendous violence against women and the financial incentives and penalties that encourage it.  As you commence your term as China’s President may the end of the One Child Policy be your earliest legacy to the Chinese people.

Sincerely,

  • The International Truth and Reconciliation Commission on the Law of Life
  • The Justice Foundation
  • The Jubilee Campaign, www.jubileecampagn.org
  • Women’s Rights without Frontiers, www.womensrightswithoutfrontiers.org
  • The Coalition to End Violence Against Pregnant Women

Please Note The Growing List of More than 23,000 Petitioners Recorded at www.womensrightswithoutfrontiers.org/index.php?nav=sign_our_petition


[1] The United Nations Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment was ratified in December 1984 and was in full force by June 1987.  China became a signatory on December 12, 1986, and ratified the Convention on October 4, 1988.

[2] These recent cases are simply illustrative of a millions of other such cases.  For additional cases, see the Coalition to End Violence against Pregnant Women’s complaint on behalf of 37 Chinese Women before the United Nation’s Commission on the Status of Women found at: www.lawoflifeproject.org/sites/default/files/pdf/pr/LOLP_PR_UNCSW_Complaint.pdf.

[3] You can read the full resolution here: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=MOTION&reference=P7-RC-2012-0388&format=PDF&language=EN&utm_source=The+European+Parliament+called+upon+China+to+end+forced+abortion.+Will+you+act%3F&utm_campaign=Euro+Parliament+Condemns+Forced+Abortion&utm_medium=email

Posted in Chen Guangcheng, China's One Child Policy, coerced abortion, European Parliament, Feng Jianmei, Forced Abortion, forced sterilization, International Human Rights Day, One Child Policy, pro-choice, pro-life, Reggie Littlejohn, reproductive health, reproductive rights, right to choose, two child policy, Uncategorized, Women's Rights Without Frontiers | Comments Off on Int’l Human Rights Day, Open Letter to Chinese President Xi Demands Immediate End to Forced Abortion

Chen Guangcheng releases powerful video ahead of International Human Rights Day

Blind activist Cheng Guangcheng, whose dramatic escape from house arrest and flight to New York captured the attention of the world in May of this year, has issued a powerful video calling the Chinese Communist Party to account for crimes committed against the Chinese people.  These include crimes committed against Chen’s own family, especially Chen Kegui, Chen’s nephew who was just given a 3-year jail sentence for defending himself when officials broke into his house and savagely beat him and his parents.  Instead of improving, Chen said that “the human rights situation in China is, in fact, getting worse . . . in China, no one is safe.”  View Chen’s new video here:

https://www.dropbox.com/s/rfwyqbtq5t4szoq/Chen%20speech%20with%20subtitles.mpg

Chen advised new Chinese President Xi Jinping that change must come to China, but “it is a matter of whether China will have the transition in a peaceful way or a violent way.”

He stated that “[t]he United States, in particular, as a beacon of freedom, needs to play a leading role” in shifting the focus of the world from trade to human rights.

Moreover, Chen continued, “the violence in maintaining China’s One Child Policy still extensively exists.  It is a sin, because life is sacred.”  In 2006, Chen was detained and tortured for exposing the massive, systematic use of forced abortion and involuntary sterilization in China.

Reggie Littlejohn, President of Women’s Rights without Frontiers, stated, “Chen Guangcheng has endured incalculable suffering for human rights in China, and in particular, for the rights of women not to be forcibly aborted or sterilized.  He has confirmed that these barbaric practices are still being used ‘extensively.’  Indeed, he has taken a bold step in declaring that the violence against women and babies committed in connection with the coercive enforcement of the One Child Policy ‘is a sin, because life is sacred.’”

Littlejohn continued, “The One Child Policy is perhaps the most hated of all the official policies in China.  It is the cause of deep social unrest simmering just beneath the surface of Chinese society.  No policy this unjust can last forever.  The leaders of the United States should join Chen in calling for a peaceful transition away from policies that are oppressing and terrorizing the people of China, who are one fifth of the population of the earth.”

Sign a petition to end forced abortion in China here.

http://www.womensrightswithoutfrontiers.org/index.php?nav=sign_our_petition

Posted in Chen Guangcheng, Chen Kegui, China's One Child Policy, coerced abortion, Forced Abortion, forced sterilization, Human Rights, International Human Rights Day, One Child Policy, pro-life, Reggie Littlejohn, reproductive rights, Uncategorized, Women's Rights Without Frontiers | Comments Off on Chen Guangcheng releases powerful video ahead of International Human Rights Day

This Thanksgiving, Give thanks for a life by saving one: Introducing the “Save a Girl” Campaign

Here’s an awesome article by Kristen Walker Hatten, posted on Live Action News today.  Here’s the link to the original story.  http://liveactionnews.org/international/introducing-the-save-a-girl-campaign/

Here’s the direct link to our “Save a Girl” Campaign http://womensrightswithoutfrontiers.org/index.php?nav=end-gendercide-and-forced-abortion

Give Thanks for a life by saving one:  Introducing the “Save a Girl” Campaign

By Kirsten Walker Hatter, Live Action News

Reggie Littlejohn is busy.

When we speak on the phone, she’s in the process of traveling through Washington, D.C., by train and on foot. At one point, her train goes underground and we’re cut off. Two weeks ago, we couldn’t speak because she was traveling in Europe.

Why is Reggie Littlejohn so busy? Because, as president of Women’s Rights Without Frontiers, she was involved in the documentary film It’s A Girl, which is being screened around the world as we speak. Recently, it was shown at the British Parliament and the European Parliament, to a diverse audience. “I think it’s pretty encouraging that the film was featured in the Amnesty International Film Festival just a few weeks ago,” says Littlejohn. “Amnesty International is not a pro-life organization.”

Littlejohn is also busy because her organization has launched a campaign that directly, literally saves baby girls. The Save A Girl campaign is one that anyone can get involved in, and it is an excellent way to give thanks for life this Thanksgiving season. The fact is, the multifarious crimes against women, girls, and the unborn in China and India explored in It’s A Girl – forced abortion, female feticide, infanticide, dowry death, and more – are not going away without help from people outside those countries. People like me. And you.

“India does not have a one-child policy,” Littlejohn explains. “India does not have a government-imposed birth limit. People are much freer in India to have a grassroots movement.” As the film explains, though, unfortunately, the culture in India – specifically the tradition of dowry –makes sons so preferred over daughters that deep cultural change will be needed to end crime against women and girls.

In China, things are more difficult; grassroots movements are impossible. “You can’t do that in China. It’s a Communist country where they control the media. People who challenge it end up like Chen Guangcheng,” Littlejohn says, referring to the blind human rights lawyer who was imprisoned for representing women in his province who had been forcibly sterilized or forced to abort their children.

Littlejohn, herself an attorney who has represented Chinese refugees and helped bring Guangcheng to the U.S., is no longer allowed into China.

“There are basically two circumstances of abortion in China,” she says. “The first is forced abortion under the One Child Policy. So if people get pregnant without a birth permit or permission and they can’t pay the fine, they end up with a forced abortion, and that abortion, it doesn’t matter if it’s a boy or a girl.” She also explains that the fines can sometimes be ten times the family’s annual income. “Then there’s gendercide, where baby girls are selected for abortion. The government is not forcing them to do that, but there is a strong correlation between coercion and gendercide.”

In other words, sons are so preferred and the number of children so strictly limited that female babies are selected for abortion – an indirect but clear result of the One Child Policy.

“It’s not just a matter of changing laws,” says Littlejohn. “You’ve got to change the culture.”

Reggie Littlejohn

In China, there is already evidence of a growing ratio of men to women, and it’s getting worse. “Already child bride kidnapping is happening in China,” Littlejohn tells me. “Also, another big effect is human kidnapping and sexual slavery. China is very much a destination for women and girls who have been trafficked for sexual slavery. Another thing they have is bachelor villages.”

Because females are so often abandoned, killed, or aborted, wives are in high demand, and women are often able to marry above their social strata, leaving poorer men wifeless. “So in the poor villages, the women have all married up, and there are only men in these villages,” Littlejohn says.

While these crimes against females sound foreign and unbelievable, the sad truth is they have come to America. “Studies have indicated that there is sex-selective abortion in the U.S. in communities that practice it in their native land,” says Littlejohn.” The thing that concerns me is the connection between sex-selection abortion and coercion. In most cases I believe in the U.S., as well as China and India, women are under intense pressure to abort if it’s a girl.”

So. The big question: what do we do? How do we stop this?

Changing thousands of years of son-preference culture in two countries and displacing a powerful Communist regime in China will not happen overnight. But there is good news: there is a real, tangible, simple way each one of us can help save the lives of baby girls in China. It’s called the Save A Girl campaign.

“The Save A Girl Campaign is how you can directly save lives in China,” Littlejohn says. “This is the official campaign that is endorsed by the It’s A Girl film.”

Littlejohn explained to me how it worked, and I had to force myself to respond through tears. I’ve been involved in the pro-life movement in various ways for several years, and this is one of the most exciting, moving campaigns I’ve heard of. Here’s how it works: “We have a network inside China of field workers who find women who have had an ultrasound and found out they’re pregnant with a girl and have decided to abort her, or have given birth to a girl and want to abandon her out in a field so she’ll die,” explains Littlejohn. “We go to her and say, ‘Don’t abort your daughter. Don’t abandon your daughter. She is a beautiful girl. We will give you a stipend every month for a year to help you keep this girl.’”

Does that sound incredible? Wait ‘til you hear this: “In every case where we have approached these women, they have kept their girls.”

“We ask people to contribute $25 a month,” says Littlejohn. “Twenty dollars goes to the women and $5 goes to cover our costs and to the field workers who are bravely finding these women and getting the money into their hands.” Right now, after having existed for only a little over a month, Save A Girl can claim 28 lives saved and women helped. “We want to have a thousand babies we’re supporting this time next year. Our only limitation is the finances.”

Women’s Rights Without Frontiers runs the campaign, maintains write-ups and photos on each baby, and collects signatures, via their field workers in China, from the parents when they receive the money. Of course, no photos or names are published. “The Chinese communist party would come and shut us down,” says Littlejohn.

“Our primary focus is to end gendercide,” Littlejohn says, “so we’re definitely locating women who are determined to abort or abandon babies. The other thing we’re doing is helping women who are fleeing from forced abortions. We have one woman who was fleeing from village to village to avoid the family planning police. She had a baby boy a few months ago.”

So Save A Girl is saving more than girls – this campaign is saving babies of both genders, and saving women from the horror of forced abortion.

For those of us who read about gendercide and the crimes against women in China and India and say, If only there were something I could do, this is the answer. For about the price of your monthly – or weekly! – Starbucks budget, you can literally save a life.

Here in the U.S. we have so much to be thankful for – not the least of which is the lives of baby girls and young women. This Thanksgiving, give thanks for your life and the lives of all women by giving to Save A Girl. Your donation will literally save a life.

Save a Girl Campaign:  http://womensrightswithoutfrontiers.org/index.php?nav=end-gendercide-and-forced-abortion

Visit the Women’s Rights Without Frontiers website to donate and share this campaign.

Posted in China's One Child Policy, Forced Abortion, gendercide, It's a Girl, Kristen Walker Hatten, Live Action News, One Child Policy, pro-choice, pro-life, Reggie Littlejohn, Save a Girl, Uncategorized, Women's Rights Without Frontiers | Comments Off on This Thanksgiving, Give thanks for a life by saving one: Introducing the “Save a Girl” Campaign

China Has Not “Abandoned” One-Child Policy – Think Tank

The China Development Research Foundation (CDRF) — a think tank affiliated with the Chinese government — has recommended that China gradually phase in a two-child policy over the next three years, and then cease all birth limits in the year 2020, according to a China Daily report.  This recommendation was based on the coming demographic disaster caused by low birth rates combined with an ageing population, as well as the severe gender imbalance caused by son preference.  Some western media sources have exaggerated the report’s recommendations, stating, for example, that the CDRF report concludes that the One Child Policy should be “abandoned immediately . . . sending shock waves through the international community . . .” or urges the Chinese government to “end” or “scrap” the One Child Policy now.

The CDRF report does not support the conclusion that China will “abandon,” “end” or “scrap” the One Child Policy immediately, nor are “shock waves” warranted, for the following reasons.

1) The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has not adopted the CDRF’s recommendations, and is not required ever to do so. Indeed, earlier this year, amidst multiple reports of late-term forced abortions, the National Population and Family Planning Commission affirmed that it continues to stand by the One Child Policy, praising it for preventing 400 million births.

2)    Instituting a two-child policy will not end forced abortion. The problem with the One Child Policy is not the number of children “allowed.”  Rather, it is the fact that the CCP is telling women how many children they can have and then enforcing that limit through forced abortion, forced sterilization and infanticide. Even if all couples were allowed two children, there is no guarantee that the CCP will cease their appalling methods of enforcement.  Regardless of the number of children allowed, women who get pregnant without permission will still be dragged out of their homes, strapped down to tables and forced to abort babies that they want, even up to the ninth month of pregnancy.  It does not matter whether you are pro-life or pro-choice on this issue.  No one supports forced abortion, because it is not a choice.

3) Instituting a two-child policy will not end gendercide. Indeed, areas in which two children currently are allowed are especially vulnerable to gendercide, the sex-selective abortion of females.  According to the 2009 British Medical Journal study of 2005 national census data, in nine provinces, for “second order births” where the first child is a girl, 160 boys were born for every 100 girls. In two provinces, Jiangsu and Anhui, for the second child, there were 190 boys for every hundred girls born. This study stated, “Sex selective abortion accounts for almost all the excess males.”  Because of this gendercide, there are an estimated 37 million Chinese men who will never marry because their future wives were terminated before they were born. This gender imbalance is a powerful, driving force behind trafficking in women and sexual slavery, not only in China, but in neighboring nations as well.

4) The Chinese Communist Party periodically modifies the One Child Policy, but the coercion at its core remains. Reports of these tweaks — especially when amplified by western media — throw the human rights world into confusion and blunt genuine efforts to end forced abortion in China.  On September 9, 2010, for example, TIME ran the headline, “China Could Overthrow One-Child Rule.” Myriad other news sources followed suit. This dramatic headline was based on the fact that China proposed to run a pilot program allowing some couples to have two children.  Soon afterwards, on September 25, 2010 – the 30th anniversary of the One Child Policy – a top population control official praised the policy and stated that China “will stick to the family planning policy in the coming decades.”  Moreover, despite this pilot program, numerous reports of late-term forced abortions have surfaced since 2010, including the forced abortion at seven months of Feng Jianmei in June 2012. For a discussion of forced abortion cases that have arisen in 2011-2012, read WRWF’s Complaint to the UNCSW. http://www.womensrightswithoutfrontiers.org/blog/?p=717

Regardless, the CDRF report is courageous and significant because of their connection with the government.  It is perhaps because of this connection that they apparently left forced abortion and other human rights atrocities out of their discussion.  (Their full report has yet to be released.)  Stating that the CDRF has recommended an immediate abandonment of the One Child Policy, however, mischaracterizes the report and abandons the women who are victims of that policy.

The Chinese Communist Party has not “abandoned” the One Child Policy based on the CDRF recommendation. The coercive enforcement of China’s One Child Policy continues to cause more violence toward women and girls than any other official policy on earth, and any other official policy in the history of the world.  Those who care about women and girls must continue to press with persistence until forced abortion and gendercide are eradicated from the face of the earth.

View WRWF’s “Save a Girl” campaign to end gendercide and forced abortion.
http://womensrightswithoutfrontiers.org/index.php?nav=end-gendercide-and-forced-abortion

Sign a petition to end forced abortion.
http://www.womensrightswithoutfrontiers.org/index.php?nav=sign_our_petition

Watch Stop Forced Abortion – China’s War on Women!  (4 mins)
www.youtube.com/watch?v=JjtuBcJUsjY

Related Links:

China Eyes Change to One Child Policy 11/2/12
http://communities.washingtontimes.com/neighborhood/red-thread-adoptive-family-forum/2012/nov/2/china-eyes-change-one-child-policy/

Time to loosen family planning policy:  think tank 10/26/12
http://usa.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2012-10/26/content_15850745.htm

WRWF’s Complaint to the UNCSW 8/1/12
http://www.womensrightswithoutfrontiers.org/blog/?p=717

Reports of Forced Abortion Fuel Push to End Chinese Law 7/22/12
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/23/world/asia/pressure-to-repeal-chinas-one-child-law-is-growing.html?_r=1&pagewanted=all

BREAKING  (Warning, graphic image) Chinese Woman Forcibly Aborted at Seven Months 6/12/12
http://www.womensrightswithoutfrontiers.org/blog/?p=667

One Child Policy to Stay, Despite Experts’ Critique 4/11/12
http://www.china.org.cn/china/2012-04/11/content_25112722.htm

Family Planning Policy Stays Put.  China Daily News, 9/27/10
http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2010-09/27/content_11350778.htm

China Could Overthrow One-Child Rule 9/9/10
http://newsfeed.time.com/2010/09/09/china-could-overthrow-one-child-rule/

Posted in abortion, China, China Development Research Foundation, China's One Child Policy, coerced abortion, Feng Jianmei, Forced Abortion, forced sterilization, gendercide, One Child Policy, pro-choice, pro-life, Reggie Littlejohn, two child policy, Uncategorized, UNCSW, Women's Rights Without Frontiers | Comments Off on China Has Not “Abandoned” One-Child Policy – Think Tank

WRWF’s Reggie Littlejohn Challenges UNFPA, IPPF at European Parliament

Brussels, November 6, 2012.  Women’s Rights Without Frontiers President Reggie Littlejohn co-presented the feature-length documentary, “It’s a Girl,” at the European Parliament, together with the film’s director, Evan Grae-Davis. Littlejohn is featured as an expert on China’s One Child Policy in this powerful new documentary exposing gendercide and forced abortion. The event, hosted by MEP Gay Mitchell packed the auditorium.

According to one UN expert, up to 200 million women are missing in the world today due to the sex-selective abortion of baby girls.  In China, moreover, the government forcibly aborts women who become pregnant in violation of the One Child Policy, up to the ninth month of pregnancy.

In response to a question about what the European Parliament can do to address this violence against women, Littlejohn raised the issue of the funding of UNFPA and International Planned Parenthood (IPPF).

Littlejohn praised the European Parliament for recently passing a resolution that  “strongly condemns . . . the practice of forced abortions and sterilizations globally, especially in the context of the one-child policy.” The resolution further states that “the EU has provided, and still provides, funds for organizations involved in family planning policies in China,” and “urges the Commission to ensure that its funding of projects does not breach” the European Parliament’s commitment against coercive population control.

Littlejohn stated, “It is significant that the European Parliament has urged the Commission to ensure that this funding is not associated with coercion.  For decades, the UNFPA and International Planned Parenthood Federation (IPPF) have worked hand in hand with the Chinese population control machine, which is coercive.  They are funded by many nations, not only in Europe but the world over, including the United States.  I have no doubt that any unbiased investigation by the European Parliament or any other governmental body will reveal that these organizations are complicit with coercive family planning in China.”

In addition, Women’s Rights Without Frontiers just launched a campaign to end gendercide and forced abortion in China. Littlejohn said, “We are saving lives in China, one baby girl at a time.”  WRWF’s “Save a Girl” campaign has been adopted by the “It’s a Girl” film as its official Action Plan for China.

Causes.com End Gendercide and Forced Abortion in China

http://www.causes.com/causes/792226-women-s-rights-without-frontiers

Check out how you can see the “It’s a Girl” film here.

http://www.itsagirlmovie.com/

Posted in China's One Child Policy, coerced abortion, European Parliament, Evan Grae Davis, Forced Abortion, forced sterilization, gendercide, It's a Girl, pro-choice, pro-life, Reggie Littlejohn, reproductive health, reproductive rights, right to choose, Uncategorized, women, women's rights | Comments Off on WRWF’s Reggie Littlejohn Challenges UNFPA, IPPF at European Parliament

WRWF’s Reggie Littlejohn to Co-Present “It’s a Girl” Film on Gendercide in British Parliament Today

LONDON, Oct. 30.  Women’s Rights Without Frontiers President Reggie Littlejohn is featured as an expert on China’s One Child Policy in the powerful new film on gendercide, “It’s a Girl.”  She will co-present the film at the British Parliament’s House of Lords on Tuesday, October 30, together with the film’s director, Evan Grae Davis and producer Andrew Brown.  The event is hosted by Lord Alton of Liverpool and Baronness Howe of Idlicote.

This one-hour documentary is called “It’s a Girl,” as these are the three deadliest words in the world.  According to one UN expert, up to 200 million women are missing in the world today due to the sex-selective abortion of baby girls.   The film contains extraordinary footage, shot on location in India and China.

Littlejohn stated, “It is a great honor to play a role in this film, which unmasks the brutality of gendercide and leaves an indelible mark on everyone who watches it.  This is the authoritative film on gendercide, the true war on women.  I believe it will be instrumental in turning the tide against the selective elimination of females, not only because of the power of the film itself, but also because of the urgency of its call to action.”

Women’s Rights Without Frontiers just launched a campaign to end gendercide in China. Littlejohn said, “We are saving lives in China, one baby girl at a time.”  WRWF’s “Save a Girl” campaign has been adopted by the “It’s a Girl” film as its official Action Plan for China.

End Gendercide — Save a Girl Campaign

http://womensrightswithoutfrontiers.org/index.php?nav=end-gendercide-and-forced-abortion

Causes.com End Gendercide and Forced Abortion in China

http://www.causes.com/causes/792226-women-s-rights-without-frontiers

In China, the birth ratio of girls to boys is the most skewed in the world:  100 girls born for every 120 boys.  Because of traditional son preference, there is a saying:  “Raising a girl is like watering someone else’s garden.”

Systematic, sex-selective abortion constitutes gendercide.  Because of this gendercide, there are an estimated 37 million more men than women in China today.  The presence of these “excess males” is the driving force behind human trafficking and sexual slavery in China.  China has the highest female suicide rate of any country in the world — 500 women a day.

The “It’s a Girl” film is an official selection at the Amnesty International 2012 REEL Awareness Film Festival.  Check out how you can see the film here.

“It’s a Girl” Website:  http://www.itsagirlmovie.com

Posted in Amnesty International, British Parliament, Forced Abortion, forced sterilization, House of Lords, Human Rights, human trafficking, It's a Girl, Lord David Alton, One Child Policy, Reggie Littlejohn, reproductive health, reproductive rights, right to choose, Uncategorized, war on women, Women's Rights Without Frontiers | Comments Off on WRWF’s Reggie Littlejohn to Co-Present “It’s a Girl” Film on Gendercide in British Parliament Today

Christian Bale Honors Chen Guangcheng, Denounces Forced Abortion in China

On Thursday actor Christian Bale presented blind forced abortion opponent Chen Guangcheng with an award at the annual gala of Human Rights First.  In December 2011, while Chen was still in China under house arrest, Bale attempted to visit Chen but was roughed up by thugs, who prevented him from visiting Chen’s village.   Bale said at that time, “What I really wanted to do was shake the man’s hand and say ‘thank you,’ and tell him what an inspiration he is.”

Chen dramatically escaped house arrest and arrived in the United States in May 2012.  The two men met for the first time tonight, when Bale presented Chen with the award.

Bale praised Chen for his bravery and for symbolizing the hopes of the people of China to live in freedom.  Significantly, Bale also highlighted Chen’s fight against forced abortion in China.  Bale stated,

“He [Chen] had exposed a program of forced abortion and sterilization in Shandong.  A program of forced abortion means that women are being dragged from their homes against their will.   They are being forced to have abortions, sometimes late-term — imagine that — with some women reportedly dying in the process.  Now this is true horror.  And in this insane world, this man, Chen, who was helping these women — who was living by some of the most simple, brave and universally admired values – values that we teach our children every day, and helping our fellow man – for this, this man was imprisoned and beaten for over four years.”

Reggie Littlejohn, President of Women’s Rights Without Frontiers, stated, “Chen Guangcheng is a towering champion of human rights, who with incomparable courage, stood alone against the Chinese totalitarian regime.  The women of China and the world will long remember his bravery on their behalf.”

“At the same time,” Littlejohn added, “Christian Bale has become a human rights champion in his own right.  He risked his safety to visit Chen last December.  His attack by Chinese thugs brought visibility to Chen’s case.  This visibility greatly helped the international effort to free Chen.  And Bale is brave to condemn the practice of forced abortion in China.  Women’s Rights Without Frontiers salutes both men.”

Watch Christian Bale present Chen Guangcheng with the award.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/blind-chinese-activist-chen-guangcheng-honored-in-new-york/2012/10/25/3ddcafdf-2b9c-4dee-a953-b35357f708b3_video.html

Watch a video about forced abortion in China (4 mins)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JjtuBcJUsjY

WRWF led the international coalition to free Chen Guangcheng.

http://www.womensrightswithoutfrontiers.org/index.php?nav=chen-guangcheng

Posted in Chen Guangcheng, China's One Child Policy, Christian Bale, Forced Abortion, forced sterilization, Human Rights, Uncategorized, Women's Rights Without Frontiers | Comments Off on Christian Bale Honors Chen Guangcheng, Denounces Forced Abortion in China