|
China working to prevent child abuse
XI’AN—Chen Cai is skinny and timid like a child. But six months of
forced labor and torture at a privately-owned brick kiln in north
China’s Shanxi Province has aged him before his time.
Chen, who quit school last year to make money for his impoverished
family in the backwaters of southwestern Sichuan Province, was abducted
and sold to the brick yard, where he had to work 20 hours a day and was
subject to whippings at the slightest sign of defiance.
When social workers found him in June during a crackdown on illegal
labor practices, he was suffering from a broken tendon in his right
wrist. “I had thought I would end up working like a slave,” he says at
the Xi’an Center for Prevention of Child Abuse in this capital of the
northwestern Shaanxi Province. After several weeks of treatment, Chen’s
hand was able to move again, but the psychological trauma takes much
longer to heal. At the Xi’an center, he receives free medical treatment
and counseling.
The center, sponsored by the International Society for Prevention of
Child Abuse and Neglect (ISPCAN) and the Shaanxi Friendship Hospital, is
the Chinese mainland’s first ever non-governmental institution to
provide free medical treatment and counseling for abused children.
Since opening in January 2006, the center has treated more than 90
victims of physical, emotional and sexual harassment, says founder Jiao
Fuyong.
Abuse and neglect are causing more injuries and deaths among Chinese
children, particularly in the countryside, says Jiao.
The former pediatrician at the Shaanxi Provincial People’s Hospital says
he had treated many children who suffered bruises and even fractures
after being abused at home or school.
He says many of the victims never receive proper treatment.
“Few people used to take the problem seriously because in China many
believe in ‘sparing the rod and spoiling the child’,” he says. In their
independent research conducted last December, Jiao and his colleagues
found 60 percent of the 276 primary school students surveyed were beaten
at home for behaving badly or getting poor grades.
China’s newly-amended Law on the Protection of Minors, in effect since
June 1, bans family violence against children. Yet only extreme cases
involving death or serious injury are reported. In May, a three-year-old
girl in Zhengzhou was beaten to death by her parents because she was
unable to read. Violence on campus is also on the rise, says Jiao.
Wang Li, 15, suffered a ruptured eardrum after a teacher slapped her
face at a high school in the suburbs of Pucheng county in Shaanxi two
years ago. She had addressed the teacher by his first name, which is
considered disrespectful. The once lively girl became depressed, refused
to leave home and crying every time she was spoken to. Her mother
aggravated her trauma by constantly recounting the incident and swearing
revenge, “each time reminding Wang of the unpleasant experience”, says
Jiao.
Wang was sent to Jiao’s center six months ago, after the provincial
women’s federation heard the family’s complaints.
“When she arrived, she just crouched on the ground crying and refusing
to talk to anyone,” says Xue Na, a volunteer at the center. Wang and her
mother received six weeks of therapy and counseling, at the end of which
the girl was able to communicate again and the mother stopped
complaining, Xue says.
The center has a team of pediatricians, nurses and counselors from local
hospitals, and recruits volunteers from China and abroad to help nurse
the children or edit the center’s publications.
“Victims like Chen and Wang are really lucky — most abused children
don’t get any treatment,” says Lei Tao, public relations manager at the
center. “Sometimes we receive reports of domestic violence against
children, but are denied entry to the house.” In China, many
non-governmental institutions are active in the prevention of child
abuse, yet many work at a theoretical level rather than provide concrete
help, says Lei. Kimberly Svevo, executive director of the International
Society for Prevention of Child Abuse and Neglect (ISPCAN), agrees that
China lags behind developed countries in the prevention of child abuse.—Xihuna |