Chinese scholars have called for a change in the voting system
to allow people to vote according to where they live as opposed to
where they are registered.
Many migrant workers now live in cities far from where they
registered as residents.
"To use residence registration to determine where a villager can
vote was feasible in the past when rural farmers, land and
residences were relatively fixed," said Xu Yong, a professor from
the rural studies center of east China's elite Normal
University.
"But great, earth-shake changes have taken place in the
countryside. Millions of farmer peasants have flocked to the cities
to work and many elders settle in the countryside after
retirement," he said. "That makes the registration no longer
suitable to decide where villagers can vote."
"Villagers have the right to directly elect or oust their
village heads and members of the village committees, but as the
Organic Law of Village Committees does not clearly define voters'
rights, disputes and even mass protests have occurred in some
village elections, which have disrupted the stability in the rural
areas," said Prof. Yuan Dayi of the Beijing Administrative College
at an ongoing symposium supported by the EU-China training program
on village governance in Beijing.
The 140 million migrant workers who have worked and lived in the
cities for more than a decade, still play the role of "an outsider"
because their residence is registered back in the countryside.
At the fourth session of the 10th National People's Congress
(NPC), 31 deputies proposed to revise the Organic Law of Village
Committees. In the proposal, deputies set forth the issued of
defining the village voters, setting up a village election law and
improving the assembly of the village deputies system.
At present, the Ministry of Civil Affairs is studying and
drafting the revised Organic Law of Village Committees and planning
to submit it to the NPC, China's top legislature.
(Xinhua News Agency April 10, 2006)