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CHINA> Focus
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Farmers speak through the ballot box
By Wu Jiao (China Daily)
Updated: 2008-08-27 06:52 Once bitten by a snake, a Chinese proverb says, a man will fear even a piece of rope for the next ten years. So what can a small farmer do when he is dissatisfied with his elected officials? For Gao Qiong, a farmer from East China's Anhui province, the solution is not to walk away in fear or cynicism, but to fight back through the ballot box.
Village elections have been a reality in China since 1982. After more than two decades, voting has become much more popular, according to Suzhou University legal expert Yang Haikun. The more tangible the benefits, the greater the participation, he said. With the current round of village elections being held throughout the country, more and more rural people are making their votes count. Last October the 17th National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party affirmed grass-roots autonomy as one of the basic components of China's political system. Revisions to further improve electoral laws are expected to be approved this year. Gao Qiong certainly feels his vote can make a difference. The triennial election is important, he told China Daily, "because it matters to the welfare of my family." For quite a number of years, he explained, his home village saw no development because the village chiefs managed badly and were only interested in getting more money into their own pockets. That village committee was voted out during the 2005 elections, but their replacement still did not exert strong leadership, Gao said. That's why even after he got a construction job in Beijing, Gao spent 1,000 yuan, half his monthly wage, to go back to his hometown to cast his vote for a new village committee. This time, Gao said, he is not alone. "My relatives, my friends, and whoever I know, all want to make the election work this time to get a village committee that truly works for the interests of all people," he said. Gao is not the only former Chinese farmer, who after being exposed to an urban environment and to new ideas, is going home to vote. In more affluent rural communities in Zhejiang province, there are even private entrepreneurs who fly back to their hometowns to participate in elections. The seriousness of voters these days is in marked contrast to participation when elections were introduced in the 1980s. Back then, villagers often used a village meeting as an occasion to socialize. Many didn't care about casting a ballot. Or if they did, some would draw the traditional Chinese insult of a turtle on the ballot as a sign of contempt. According to legal expert Yang, many villagers did not see the benefit of replacing a village committee that had been appointed by higher authorities with an elected board. At the central government level, the Ministry of Civil Affairs (MAC) handles matters related to village elections. MAC figures show that by the end of 2007, there were 2.4 million elected officials in 611,000 village committees across China. More than 90 percent of Chinese farmers have participated in at least one election. In some villages, six to seven elections have been held. According to MCA official Wang Jinhua, farmers are learning to have a say in who manages their communal resources, "They have become very careful in weighing local leadership, " he said. It is not just through elections. In some villages, elected officials have been impeached for incompetence or corruption. In June, two heads of the Chenjiaying village committee in Yunnan province were forced to resign for trying to sell communal land without the consent of the 800 villagers. The most typical items on a village's agenda are projects that often require public financing and promise some public benefit - such as roads, water resources, or sales of land rights or other local resources. Matters for debate may also include social welfare issues, such as funding for the village school and group medical insurance. In the past, villagers would have little say on these matters. Now, they not only do have a say, but can also demand that all major decisions be made in a fully transparent way. "Chinese farmers demand democracy, and have the capability of exercising it," Wang asked. Getting people to vote is no longer a problem, Wang said. The next goal is to ensure fair elections by preventing vote rigging, he said. At a recent press conference Wang admitted that corruption and "buying votes" marred some elections. He said MAC estimated that 3 percent of rural votes are bought. Another complication, Wang pointed out, is that the existing election laws on village committees, which came into effect in 1998, provide no clear definition of election fraud or what the penalties would be. MAC found that in the city of Wenzhou, in East China's Zhejiang Province, villagers were afraid to testify in cases of election fraud for fear of retribution, Wang said. According to local media reports, 42 people in Wenzhou were detained by police for disrupting the ongoing village elections earlier this year. In a culture where family ties are valued, clan relations may further complicate elections. In one reported case, four newly elected village heads were killed by their predecessors who lost the election in Langfang in North China's Hebei Province. To date the case has not been resolved. MAC has drafted a revision of China's law on the organization of village committees that defines election fraud and penalties. The draft revision has already been submitted to the State Council to take to the National People's Congress for review and approval, Wang said. More importantly, for the first time in Chinese history, the draft revision includes the idea of the secret ballot, stipulating that a particular place must be provided for villagers to vote in privacy, he added. Experts have welcomed the revision. Law professor Mo Jihong of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS), said village elections are an important means for Chinese citizens to learn about democracy and to protect their interests. "With a better law, the rural democratic process can become the backbone of democracy for the entire nation," Mo said. In the meantime, before the new revision becomes law, Gao Qiong still faces some of the current problems in village elections. "The family members of some of the candidates will go to people's houses to ask for votes, sometimes they promise money," he said, indicating that the problem of buying votes might be more widespread than the official figures show. But he looked undaunted. "We've been collecting evidence of foul play. We will expose them and ask for a re-count, as the law entitles us to do," said the farmer with only a middle school education who has taught himself about the country's imperfect electoral laws. |
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