
Chinese company withdraws notice setting deadline for single workers to get married
A company in China has rolled back a policy threatening never-married and divorced employees with termination if they were still single by the end of September, after pushback from the public as well as government officials.
The Shuntian Chemical Group, based in eastern China's Shandong province, announced the policy last month in an effort to boost the marriage rate among its employees.
The company, which has more than 1,200 employees, told unmarried workers ages 28 to 58, including those who are divorced, that they were required to 'resolve your personal marriage issues' by Sept. 30.
'If not completed by the first quarter, you must write a self-reflection,' its announcement read. 'If not completed by the second quarter, the company will conduct an evaluation.'
'If you cannot get married and establish a family by the third quarter, the company will terminate your labor contract,' it continued. 'Please take note.'
The notice also criticized single employees for 'not responding to the national call' to marry and have children, accusing them of being 'disloyal and disobedient to parental advice.'
The announcement, which comes amid a concerted Chinese government effort to boost marriage and birth rates, was widely criticized online.
'Isn't this just another reason to fire an employee?' read one comment on the Chinese social media platform Weibo.
Chinese media reported that officials from the local human resources and social security bureau visited the company on Feb. 13 and pointed out that the policy violated Chinese labor law. The company withdrew it by the next day.
'This announcement has been withdrawn because some of the words used were inappropriate,' a person who answered the phone at Shuntian Chemical Group but declined to give their name told NBC News on Tuesday.
The government of China, the world's second-most-populous country after India, has been trying to stoke the younger generation's interest in getting married and having children in the face of a declining and aging population.
The number of new marriages in China fell by a fifth last year, the biggest drop on record, according to government data released this month, while the population fell in 2024 for the third consecutive year, to 1.408 billion.
Ahead of China's annual parliamentary meeting next week, one national political adviser has suggested lowering the legal age for marriage to 18 as one way to reverse current trends, Chinese media reported Tuesday.
At 22 for men and 20 for women, the legal age for marriage in China is among the highest in the world. The legal age is 18 in most developed countries including most of the United States, though most U.S. states allow younger people to get married with parental or judicial consent.
The proposal met with skepticism among Chinese social media users, some of whom noted the high unemployment rate among young people.
'When you don't even have the ability to make money, do you want to have a baby for your parents to raise?' read one comment on Weibo.

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Glasgow Times
2 days ago
- Glasgow Times
Glasgow museum plans to loan art for tour in China
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The Herald Scotland
2 days ago
- The Herald Scotland
Scotland's Hong Kong community thriving despite China fears
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He admitted to the authorities that he had killed her, but he could not be tried for her murder as it happened in Taiwan, and could not be extradited due to Hong Kong's status as a 'special administrative region' of China since it was handed over by the British in 1997. Hong Kong had no extradition agreements with mainland China as a safeguard to its separate legal system, and could not do a treaty with Taiwan as Beijing does not recognise it. When the bill was proposed critics immediately raised fears it could be used to arrest political dissidents, with the largest in the history of Hong Kong erupting. Protests in Hong Kong The bill was eventually withdrawn on October 23, 2019 but in June the following year a new national security law was passed criminalising "separatism, subversion, terrorism and foreign interference", punishable up to life in prison, which many feared would lead to a crackdown on civil liberties. In response the British government offered the visa programme to those at risk. The reach of the Chinese Communist Party is long though, with Amnesty International reporting that students studying abroad are harassed and subject to surveillance to prevent them engaging with "sensitive" issues while overseas. In 2022 a human rights group alleged the CCP was running a secret police station at the Loon Fung restaurant in Glasgow, though Police Scotland found no evidence of any criminality. Safeguard Defenders said the Chinese government was using a network of such offices to intimidate dissidents and criminal suspects and try to pressure them into returning to China. The group's report said 'persuasion to return' involved techniques such as refusing to renew passports; surveillance or punishment of family back in China; or direct threats, surveillance and harassment by undercover agents, embassy and consulate staff, and secret police. Officially all the police stations were shut down in 2023, but the Hong Kong community feels the eyes of Beijing at all times. Chan says: "This is something very real for us, it's something we fear every day. "We see news from Hong Kong and we still see the government arresting people when they arrive there. Three months ago there was a girl who posted something on Facebook when she was living in Japan, she went back to Hong Kong to visit her family and the police arrested her at the airport. 'This tension is always there in our community, the tension hasn't left us even since we moved to this country. 'The long-armed repression is something very real, especially in Glasgow where we know secret police stations are being run in Chinese restaurants. Police Scotland have said they can't find any evidence but to run something like that you don't need any paperwork, all you need is a back room. 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NBC News
2 days ago
- NBC News
NAACP calls for emergency shutdown of Musk's supercomputer in Memphis
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