The daughter of a Chinese grandmother has been ordered to
visit her at least once every two months, in the first case under a new
law to protect the elderly, reports said on Tuesday.
“Leaning on a cane” the woman, 77, “hobbled to the
plaintiff’s seats” at a court in Wuxi, which heard the case against the
daughter and her husband on Monday, the Wuxi Daily reported.
The law, which came into effect Monday, was enacted amid rising
concerns that China’s rapid development has challenged its traditional
extended family unit and created a spiralling number of “empty nest”
homes.
Reports of elderly people being neglected or mistreated by their children have shocked the country.
The couple from Wuxi, in the eastern province of Jiangsu, had agreed
to care for the woman, surnamed Chu, but had not visited since she went
to live with her son following a family dispute, the report said.
The People’s Court in Beitang district decided the couple should
visit the mother at least once every two months, and on at least two of
China’s national holidays, it added.
It also said that the couple could be ordered to pay compensation if they did not visit.
The Law on Protection of the Rights and Interests of the Elderly says
family members should visit relatives who are aged over 60 “often” but
does not give a precise definition of the term.
Experts have voiced concern that the new law will be difficult to
enforce, while China’s huge army of web users ridiculed the regulation,
with one labelling it an “insult to the nation”.
More than 14 percent of China’s population, or 194 million people,
are aged over 60, according to the most recent figures from the National
Bureau of Statistics.
The United Nations estimates that by 2050, 30 percent of Chinese will
be 60 or over, up from 10 percent in 2000 and compared with a worldwide
average of 20 percent.
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