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Brief Introduction of 56
Minorities
China is a large country famed for its
dense population and vast territory. According to official
figures, in 1990 the population of China was 1,115,000,000,
nearly 20 percent of the world's total population. Of these,
about 20 percent lived in cities although since then this has
certainly increased as peasants pouring into the coastal cities
looking for work. More than a quarter of the population is
illiterates, while 600 million have been to school and 4.4
million are university graduates.
There are altogether 56 Minorities in China, among which 55 are
officially recognized ethnic minorities except Han. The defining
elements of a minority are language, homeland, and social
values. The 53 ethnic groups use the spoken languages of their
own; 23 ethnic minorities have their own written languages.
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Han Chinese
Han Chinese makes up 93 percent of the
total. According to the 1995 sample survey on 1 percent of
China's population, there were 1,099.32 million Han people (an
increase of 56.84 million since the Fourth National Population
Census of 1990), accounting for 91.02 percent of China's total
population. The Han people are found in all parts of the
country, but mainly in the middle and lower reaches of the
Yellow River (Huanghe), Yangtze River (Changjiang) and Pearl
River (Zhujiang) rivers and the Northeast Plain. The areas
inhabited by the ethnic minorities are mainly in the border
regions of the north, northeast, northwest and southwest China.
The Han people have its own spoken and
written language, known as the Chinese language, which is
commonly used throughout China and a working language of the
United Nations. The Hui and Manchu ethnic groups also use the
Han (Chinese) language.
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Ethnic Minority
Most of the 7 percent of the minorities live
in the vast areas of the West, Southwest and Northwest. The
largest is the 12million-strong Zhuang in southwestern China.
Although minorities account for about 7% of the population, they
are distributed over some 50% of Chinese-controlled territory,
mostly in the sensitive border regions. Minority separatism has
always been a threat to the stability of China, particularly
among the Uighurs and the Tibetans, who have poor and often
volatile relations with the Han Chinese. Therefore, the Chinese
government has set up special training centers, like the
National Minorities Institute in Beijing, to train loyal
minority cadres for these regions. Equality, unity and common
prosperity are the fundamental objectives of the government in
handling the relations between ethnic groups. To this end, while
maintaining unified leadership of the state, China exercises a
policy of regional autonomy for various ethnic groups, allowing
minority peoples living in compact communities to establish
self-government and direct their own affairs.
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Self-government of Ethnic Minority
Self-government in ethnic minority
autonomous areas is affected through the local people's congress
and people's government at the particular level. There are
currently five autonomous regions in China. They are Inner
Mongolia Autonomous Region founded on May 1, 1947, Ningxia Hui
Autonomous Region founded on October 25, 1958, Xinjiang Uygur
Autonomous Region founded on October 1, 1955, Guangxi Zhuang
Autonomous Region founded on March 5, 1958 and Tibet Autonomous
Region founded on September 9, 1965. Besides these, China also
has 30autonomous prefectures and 121 autonomous counties (or in
some cases, banners). The committee of the People's Congress and
the head of the government of an autonomous region, autonomous
prefecture or autonomous county are of the area's designated
ethnic minority.
Organs of self-government in regional
autonomous areas enjoy extensive self-government rights beyond
those held by other state organs at the same level. These
include enacting regulations for self-government and specialized
regulations corresponding to local political, economic and
cultural conditions; making independent use of local revenue,
and independently arranging and managing construction,
education, science, culture, public health and other local
undertakings. The Central Government has greatly assisted in the
training of minority cadres and technicians through the
establishment of institutes and cadre schools for ethnic
minorities to supplement regular colleges and universities. It
has, in addition, supplied the ethnic minority autonomous areas
with large quantities of financial aid and material resources in
order to promote their economic and cultural development.
What is more, China has implemented
family planning to control the population growth with the speed
of 15 million per year. The basic demands of the family planning
are late marriage and late childbirth, having fewer but
healthier babies specially one child for one couple. At present,
family planning as a basic state policy is supported by a vast
majority of the Chinese people.