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China signs law easing social registration system
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Dec 15, 2015


Gone girls: N. Korean pop band sneaks out of China
Beijing (AFP) Dec 12, 2015 - North Korea's premier pop group, the all-girl Moranbong band reportedly formed by leader Kim Jong-Un, has cancelled its first concert abroad, China's National Centre for the Performing Arts said Saturday.

The reclusive country's premier pop group was scheduled to perform at the venue in Beijing from Saturday evening as part of attempts to restore troubled ties between the traditional allies.

"We express deep regret for the inconvenience this may have brought you," the centre wrote on its official account website.

After the abrupt cancellation, the band's members headed to the capital's airport, according to Chinese news portal Sohu, which added that the performance hall had begun dismantling their stage.

Japanese network NTV showed footage of women in military coats arriving at the flight hub, while pictures of the band's disappearing act showed up on Chinese social media.

The photos show the women, clad in long coats and tall fur hats, getting out of a van in front of the airport, before striding past bystanders snapping pictures with their cell phones.

China has traditionally been North Korea's sole regional ally and main provider of trade and aid, but ties have become strained in recent years as Pyongyang has pressed ahead with internationally condemned nuclear tests.

Kim himself has yet to visit Beijing, three years after inheriting power from his father Kim Jong-Il.

There was no suggestion as to why the band's trip had been cut short.

On Chinese social media, Internet users suggested that the abrupt decision may have been related to Pyongyang's announcement this week that it had developed a hydrogen bomb.

"The next thing they'll do is test a nuclear weapon, and go against Xi Dada", one commentator said on Sina Weibo, a Twitter-like social media platform, using a common nickname for President Xi Jinping.

The band's arrival in Beijing was widely covered, but the show was not open to the public, the National Center for the Performing Arts in Beijing told AFP.

The band have shaken up the reclusive country's generally staid music scene with renditions of patriotic songs, along with Western hits such as "My Way" and the theme from Rocky performed on electric violins.

The concert in Beijing was billed as a "friendship performance" by North Korea's state-run KCNA agency, which praised the "worldwide stylish band" as "the first standard-bearer on the ideological and cultural front".

The Moranbong band first performed in 2012 and its members are reportedly hand-picked by Kim.

China will loosen some restrictions on the free movement of workers within the country, long stymied by registration papers that limit access to critical social services, state media reported Saturday, although the new rules may leave many out in the cold.

The labour of hundreds of millions of migrants has helped achieve China's transformation from an overwhelmingly agrarian society under orthodox Communism to the world's second-largest economy.

But the country's "hukou" system of residency permits, established decades ago, continues to deny those who move, and their children, equal access to services like education and healthcare.

The rules have created a generation of 61 million "left behind children" often raised by their grandparents or other family members, with more than three percent simply left on their own, according to state media.

Another estimated 13 million Chinese citizens live without any documents at all, cursing them to a shadowy existence, with no access to basic public services or legal route to employment.

Premier Li Keqiang "recently" signed the cabinet order that promises to "improve basic public services in urban areas", according to a report by the Xinhua state news service, which added the rules would take effect on January 1 of next year.

Those who have obtained steady, legal work for more than six months will, in some cases, be eligible for better access to services, according to a copy of the rules posted on the cabinet's web site.

While that may make things easier for workers moving between the country's smaller cities, the provisions suggest they may be of little help to those seeking employment in so-called "mega cities" like Beijing or Shanghai, not to mention illegal living in the country's shadows.

Obtaining services requires getting a residence certificate, the new rules say, but acquiring the document requires legal proof of residence and employment, a Catch-22 that likely means the rules do not apply to many migrant workers.

The rules become increasingly strict in proportion to a city's size.

Getting a residence permit in Beijing, for example, requires proof of legal residence and employment, as well as proof of social insurance, continuous residence and a "perfect" score on a government point system.

The country tightly controls the number of people allowed to live in the capital and has made moves to check the growth of its population.

Although Beijing has repeatedly promised it will change the "hukou" system as part of structural reforms aimed at improving economic performance, changes have been incremental.


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