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UPDATED: September-5-2008  
Fund for Disabled Founded in Beijing
 

The China Welfare Fund for the Handicapped has been established in Beijing, with Wang Zhen, Member of the Political Bureau of the Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party, as honorary director-in-chief and Cui Naifu, Minister of Civil Affairs, as director-in-chief.

The fund will promote the progress of welfare for the handicapped in China, encourage society's respect and support for the disabled and enable them to participate in the social life with the same rights and duties as other citizens.

China has more handicapped people than any other country. According to estimates, there are at least 20 million disabled in China. Many of them were maimed during the revolutionary war or while working. Others became handicapped as a result of persecution by the Lin Biao and Jiang Qing counter-revolutionary cliques during the "cultural revolution" (1966-76). Deng Pufang, deputy director-in-chief of the fund, was an example in point. He is a son of Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping.

In China, the disabled enjoy the same social status as other citizens in work, life and education and receive care from the state and various organizations.

In the countryside, handicapped people able to work are given proper jobs in their collective economic organizations. Those unable to work enjoy the five guarantees (food, clothing, medical care, housing and burial expenses).

In the cities, jobs for the handicapped have been arranged by 8,600 collective production units and 1,600 social welfare factories. In most cities, 70 per cent of the disabled have been given jobs.

In addition, the state has established various welfare undertakings and 290 special schools for the blind and deaf-mute, reformed the braille and sign languages, strengthened its work in preventing and treating diseases, and carried out research and education of the artificial limbs.

The state has now allocated 26 million yuan for the fund and preparations are being made for the establishment of a research centre in Beijing. The fund will collect donations at home and abroad and gradually expand its welfare services for the handicapped. It will also develop friendly contacts with foreign handicapped's associations and with individuals.

(Beijing Review p.12,  No.14, 1984)

 


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