Editorial | Tougher penalties can help protect women
- On International Women’s Day, two shocking cases of abuse have created political fallout in China
International Women’s Day falls in the same week as China’s annual parliamentary sessions. The coincidence will not be remembered so much in China for the chosen theme of gender equality in climate action, as for the political fallout from the scandal of a trafficked woman found chained up in a hut at Xuzhou city, Jiangsu province.
It prompted Premier Li Keqiang to target the trafficking of women and children in his work report to the National People’s Congress, in which he promised a crackdown and more support for community groups and welfare.
The woman’s plight came to light more than a month ago when video footage of her with a chain around her neck, apparently put there by her husband, went viral.
Public anger simmered despite the diversion of the Beijing Winter Olympics, amid debate over revelations that she was sold twice in 1998, was mentally ill and had eight children.
Censorship, a 6,000-word statement by the Jiangsu authorities and the sacking, punishment or investigation of 17 officials failed to quell the furore.
Authorities were accused of failing to respond quickly to the scandal and of trying to cover it up. Appeals by academics and activists for stronger recognition of women and children’s rights were reflected in a debate among a number of delegates about possible measures to protect them, particularly in poor areas.