Latest News:  

English>>China Society

Parents who take children to beg could lose guardianship

(Chinadaily.com.cn)

08:13, March 14, 2013

Parents who beg with their underage children may be deprived of their parental guardianship under a new regulation to protect street children's rights and interests adopted in Guangzhou, capital of Guangdong province.

The government can file an appeal to cancel parents' guardianship if they are caught begging with their children under the new regulation, Guangzhou Daily reported.

The city government passed the regulation, which strengthens protection and rescue work for strayed minors, on Monday, the report said.

Since August 2003, the city's rescue services have tackled 14,992 cases involving strayed minors, according to the Guangzhou's civil affairs bureau.

Yi Lihua, deputy director of the bureau, told the paper that the regulation aims to guide NGOs and volunteers in helping strayed children, and she called on such associations to report cases through instant messaging services, including micro blogs and hotlines.

We Recommend:

China's weekly story (2013.2.28-3.8)

Art schools exams in Chinese style

Yao Ming, the CPPCC Member

Eye-catching girls taking arts school exams

Foxes seek food from oil workers in Xinjiang

Cool Chinese female airplane captains

'Fresh style' in Chinese cities

The best partners during 'two sessions'

Daily life of female airborne security guard

Email|Print|Comments(Editor:HuangJin、Wang Jinxue)

Leave your comment0 comments

  1. Name

  

Selections for you


  1. Naval escort taskforce in anti-hijack exercise

  2. Armored regiment in live-ammunition drill

  3. Kim Jong Un visits Defence Detachment

  4. 21 miners killed in colliery accident

  5. How we face 'getting old before getting rich'

  6. Photo story: Brave young mother

  7. Is it cute or scary?

  8. Nature's nirvana

  9. Boeing 787 plan for battery fix approved

  10. China's fiscal policy over past 5 years

Most Popular

Opinions

  1. Efforts needed to nurture ethnic culture, language
  2. Filipina maids or local ayi?
  3. China won't take part in currency wars
  4. Long live the kingdom of bicycles!
  5. Income gap still hot topic
  6. Bigger does not always mean better for megacities
  7. Railway ministry revamp will not impact ratings
  8. Active yet prudent urbanization needed for China
  9. China's dating TV show inspires copycat in Chicago
  10. Int'l influence of Chinese films improving

What’s happening in China

How we face 'getting old before getting rich'

  1. Man who kept sex slave detained
  2. 6,000 dead pigs collected from Shanghai river
  3. Caring for families that lost their only child
  4. Beijing subway overtakes Moscow as busiest
  5. High-end restaurant forced to drop prices