|
China’s Cabinet solicits opinion on rules to honor martyrs
BEIJING—The State Council,
China’s Cabinet, has started to solicit public opinion on a regulation
dealing with the standards and measures to honor the country’s martyrs.
The Legislative Affairs Office of the State Council published the draft
regulation on its website on Wednesday. The draft said that “families of
martyrs could get a ‘compliment fund’ worth 15 times the annual wage in
the previous year. The annual wage in 2006 was 21,001 yuan (2,876.8 U.S.
dollars),with a daily income of 83.66 yuan, according to the latest
figures from the National Bureau of Statistics.
The regulation, with seven chapters and 38 stipulations, sets detailed
procedures in the assessment and standard of martyrs, special treatment
for their families, preservation and management of foreign and domestic
memorials and legal responsibilities.
It said that those who died while cracking down on crimes, carrying out
national security tasks, handling emergencies, rescuing state,
collective or citizens’ property and lives and performing foreign
affairs or aid assignments or peacemaking missions, could be entitled to
“martyr” status. People declared “missing” in war or in frontier defense
or disaster relief missions could be endorsed as martyrs as well, it
said.
Martyrs’ families could enjoy special treatment such as preference in
military enlistment, civil service and other employment, medical
services, school enrolment, housing and pensions, it said.
Memorials must not be used for purposes other than showing reverence for
martyrs. Expansion, reconstruction or moving of such facilities were
strictly banned, it said.
The regulation also prohibits the burial of others’ bodies. The public
can comment online, by e-mail or by post by March 3. Three electricity
workers in central Hunan Province were posthumously named as martyrs by
the provincial government on Jan.28. They died while cleaning the ice
from a 50-meter transmission tower that collapsed.—Xinhua |