This Week in Asia

China's child separation Covid-19 rules are damaging bid to boost birth rate

After a public outcry, Shanghai this week eased its hardline policy on separating Covid-positive children from their parents at medical care facilities, allowing some families to remain together.

But the damage from this policy - stemming from China's embrace of zero Covid and ensuring that anyone who has tested positive must be kept apart at all costs from those who have tested negative - has been done.

Let's not forget the bigger picture here. After decades of a one-child policy, Beijing moved to a two-child policy in 2016 and further relaxed the rules last year to allow couples to have three children, in the hope of tackling the ageing population problem.

Do you have questions about the biggest topics and trends from around the world? Get the answers with SCMP Knowledge, our new platform of curated content with explainers, FAQs, analyses and infographics brought to you by our award-winning team.

China's fertility rate of 1.3 children per woman in 2020 puts it on par with ageing societies like Japan and Italy. Public response to the relaxation of the rules has been tepid, though, partly because of the heavy financial burden of raising children and the lack of government and social support.

Now the child separation rules related to the pandemic have made things worse. On Chinese social media websites the move to keep children and their parents apart has been described as "inhumane" and "bizarre".

While online comments cannot be seen as representative of the entire public's views, the anxiety and uncertainty expressed by a vocal minority will surely linger in the minds of those reading them.

Many had questioned if the child separation policy would, or could, be consistently implemented as Covid-19 cases continued to increase. Even after the policy reversal, people continued to make comments such as "no kids please, too much stress" and "have kids at risk to your own sanity!"

They also expressed concern for those children separated from their parents, wondering what sort of emotional and psychological impact there might be further down the line.

That the policy - which will long be seared in the collective memory of the public - has ended will surely do little to help China increase its population growth rate, which has been substantially shrinking in recent years.

The Hong Kong government's reputation has also been dented by the policy, which was only reversed at the end of March, and not before as many as 2,000 children under the age of 10 were separated from their parents, according to a Hong Kong charity.

For those outside China, reading about child separation and the stress and grief families face will only pour fuel on the country's poor human rights record.

This includes the alleged separation of ethnic Uygur children from parents detained in what the authorities describe as "re-education camps" in Xinjiang province.

The children are said to have been placed in state-run welfare institutions and boarding schools without parental consent or access, according to rights groups.

This article originally appeared on the South China Morning Post (SCMP).

Copyright (c) 2022. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

More from This Week in Asia

This Week in Asia4 min read
Election Backlash Looms For UK Indian Diaspora's Ex-poster Boy Rishi Sunak
Rishi Sunak, once a poster boy for Britain's Indian diaspora, now faces their growing dissatisfaction amid rising living costs and economic stagnation - further hurting his prospects in the country's general election on Thursday. The opposition Labou
This Week in Asia4 min read
Indonesia Plans Tariffs Of Up To 200% On China-made Products To Protect Domestic Industries
Indonesia is planning to impose up to 200 per cent tariffs on certain China-made products as it seeks to protect its domestic manufacturing industry against dumping practices triggered by Western nations' trade wars with Beijing. President Joko Widod
This Week in Asia3 min read
'Fake Filipino': Investigators Say Mayor Alice Guo's Fingerprints Match Chinese National's
Alice Guo, the Philippine mayor suspected of being a "Chinese asset" after being linked to a raided offshore gaming operator, may soon have her position and citizenship stripped away after authorities said her fingerprints matched those of a Chinese

Related Books & Audiobooks