State Council urged to halt 'illegal' extra permits required to secure hukou for babies
Experts write petition saying local bureaus are breaking the law by asking family-planning certificates for hukou
Officials’ long-time practice of requiring special family-planning permits before parents can secure hukou residency papers for their babies is “clearly illegal”, according to lawyers and scholars who are calling for an end to such restrictions.
The 32 experts wrote a letter to the National People’s Congress and State Council yesterday urging the central government to remove the extra paperwork and issue hukous based on birth certificates alone, as stated by law.
Hukou, or household registrations, affords permanent residency status. There is a gap between the social benefits urban and rural hukou holders are entitled to. Those without hukou do not have legal status and hence cannot apply for social benefits or even apply for a passport.
Some local administrations require parents to provide birth-permission certificates or receipts proving they have paid fines for breaching the one-child policy.
“Some local authorities’ regulations are clearly illegal,” lawyer Huang Yizhi, who signed the letter, was quoted by The Beijing News as saying. “They conflict with the existing laws and also the regulations issued by the state departments.”
The joint letter urged China’s highest executive body, the State Council, along with the ministries of security, education and health to forbid such practices. It asked public security organisations to release hukou based on birth certificates.