Elderly suicide rates mar Chinese leader Xi Jinping’s ‘victory’ over rural poverty

The 20th National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), which convenes in Beijing on Oct. 16, is expected to grant an unprecedented third five-year term to Xi Jinping, the CCP general secretary and state president. In the run up to the congress, RFA has examined the 69-year-old Xi’s decade at the helm of the world’s most populous nation in a series of reports on Hong Kong, foreign policy, intellectuals, and civil society.

In the summer of 2022, a Chinese video blogger had a viral hit with what he intended as an inspirational tale of his great uncle, a resourceful elderly relative who made a living as a carpenter, and was still working well into his eighties.

But the narration also carried a sting in the tail: “Second Uncle really wants to earn a little retirement money for himself … but my grandmother can’t take care of herself any more, even telling me ‘I don’t want to live any more,’ and that she once hung up a noose ready on the doorframe.”

As ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP) leader Xi Jinping gears up to seek an unprecedented third term in office at the 20th party congress on Sunday, he will be claiming among his achievements the “eradication” of extreme poverty in China.

China declared in November 2020 that it had eliminated extreme poverty, claiming success for one of Xi’s key policy goals ahead of the CCP’s centenary the following year.

Yet as government-backed employment schemes have focused on getting younger people to seek jobs in cities, elderly people in rural areas have been left to eke a meager living from government subsidies, without the younger generation around to help, and without enough money for decent medical care.

Many are deciding such a life isn’t worth living any more.

New research published in July 2022 and cited by state news agency Xinhua showed that the suicide rate among elderly people in rural areas has risen fivefold over the last two decades

“When you go to the countryside, you often hear that someone died, and when you ask about it, they often tell you it was pesticides [which means] suicide,” former NGO worker Yao Cheng, who has researched women and children’s rights in rural China, told RFA.

A scene from the film “Second Uncle,” which is about a man in his 80s still making a living as a carpenter.
A scene from the film “Second Uncle,” which is about a man in his 80s still making a living as a carpenter.

Old bachelors

“In 2011, a German journalist and I went into a mountainous area of Hunan, where basically everyone in the village had left,” Yao said. “It took two hours walking through the mountains to get there.”

“The younger people in the village had all gone to find work … and everyone left behind were old bachelors in their 60s and 70s,” he said. “A lot of them were living on monthly subsistence payments from the government of less than 100 yuan [currently 170 yuan/month].”

“They didn’t want to die in pain; I heard that they would hoard extra sleeping pills because they wouldn’t have the strength to hang themselves if they were sick,” he said. “Another common suicide method is drinking pesticides.”

“They don’t feel that they can carry on living any more.”

A resident of a village in the eastern province of Anhui, who gave only the initial L, said at least two elderly people from his hometown have ended their lives during the past three or four years, often because of illness.

“The most urgent need in rural areas is medical care: general medical care; chronic disease care and treatment for serious illnesses,” L said, adding that his mother-in-law currently struggles to find money for her glaucoma medication.

While her medical insurance once reimburse half of the 3,000 yuan annual cost, now she gets nothing at all, prompting L to wonder whether the funding has been taken up by the constant COVID-19 tests required under Xi Jinping’s zero-COVID policy.

U.S.-based rights activist Chen Guangcheng, who has represented rural residents trying to defend their rights through legal channels, told a similar story.

“Elderly people in rural areas are actually forced to choose suicide by their circumstances,” Chen said. “They are ultimately still dependent on the small amount of food they can produce from the land.”

“Without mobility, they have nothing,” he said.

CLNYsuicide_v002 (1).pngLack of economic security

Yu-Chih Chen, an assistant professor in social work and social administration at the University of Hong Kong who researches healthy aging, said China’s elderly are fundamentally insecure.

“There’s a saying in rural China that goes ‘put off the small stuff, suffer through the big stuff, and don’t go to hospital till you’re at death’s door’,” Chen said.

“This is a reflection of the general lack of economic security and people’s inability to meet their medical needs.”

Data from China’s 2020 national census found that nearly 24 percent of the rural population is now over 60, with more than 100 million elder people now living alone in the homes where they once raised their families.

Social isolation is also a major driving force behind suicide in this group, according to Chen Yu-Chih.

“Social isolation has been proven to drive mortality in academic studies,” Chen said. “The impact on health is similar to the effect of smoking 15 cigarettes a day.”

Conversely, a 2021 study by population researchers at the University of Pennsylvania found that the suicide rate among older adults fell by 8.7 percent during the Lunar New Year holiday, when grown children return to their parental home.

Chen Guangcheng says the issue could be solved by better government policies.

“The CCP shouldn’t misallocate its social resources,” he said, adding that there is a huge imbalance in government spending across rural areas and cities.

More than 500 million people currently live in rural areas, around 36 percent of the population. Yet they depend for their healthcare on just 1.35 million rural clinics, of which only around 690,000 are staffed by certified doctors and healthcare workers, a ratio of one healthcare worker to more than 700 people.

A doctor walks along a road through the village of Jianhua, located on the outskirts of Shuangcheng in Heilongjiang province, China, March 29, 2011. Credit: Reuters
A doctor walks along a road through the village of Jianhua, located on the outskirts of Shuangcheng in Heilongjiang province, China, March 29, 2011. Credit: Reuters

Mental health crisis

Figures from 2021 showed a 40 percent drop in the number of people holding rural doctor certification, from 1.26 million in 2011, with an official study citing low pay and lack of security for old age and retirement as major factors behind the fall.

Yao Hao, a psychiatrist at the Shanghai Mental Health Center, penned an article earlier this year in the officially backed English-language media outlet Sixth Tone, sounding the alarm over a mental health crisis in rural areas.

“At present, the responsibility for caring for those with mental illnesses is shared between families, communities, and institutions, with families bearing the brunt of the burden,” Yao wrote. “In China [there is a] social obligation for families to take care of members who are unwell.”

“This obligation puts a huge amount of pressure on families, especially in poorer communities,” he wrote. “Once that pressure exceeds the family’s ability to cope, problems are likely to arise; for example, patients are sometimes left in the hospital or locked in their homes.”

Recent figures from China’s National Aging Office, the ministry of civil affairs and finance ministry indicate that there are also 40.63 million disabled and semi-disabled elderly people in China, with just 44,000 qualified elder care workers in the entire country.

The lack of care workers often leaves rural elderly residents to rely on friends and neighbors for support, according to Chen Yu-Chih.

“But these resources aren’t sustainable,” Chen said. “They are unreliable and unstable.”

A Beijing resident who gave only the initial C, whose grandmother took her own life, said lack of money is often enough of a reason for elderly people to take their own lives.

“Some people say that the elderly don’t want to commit suicide; they just need pensions,” C said. “Maybe Beijing and Shanghai have more in the way of pensions for the elderly, but in most areas, as far as I know … there are actually very few pensions for the elderly.”

“After my grandma passed away, the local government didn’t respond in any way,” C said. “I was pretty shocked. It’s obviously due to a problem they created. How can they be so unjust and indifferent?”

Back in Anhui, L wanted to know why rural communities have always had to shoulder the burden of political, social and economic change in China.

“My grandfather had high blood pressure and had to take various medications for diseases of the elderly,” L said. “It cost 800-900 yuan a month, adding up to around 10,000 yuan a year.”

“That cost was astronomical for him, an old man living alone in the countryside.”

“Ever since the [People’s Republic of China] was founded in 1949, it has always been the rural areas and farming communities who have made the biggest sacrifices, including through the [post-1979] economic reforms,” L said.

“They have always had inadequate education, medical care and pensions … This is a huge segment of the population, and yet [those in power] can’t tell that they are suffering, or they don’t know why?”

“Haven’t they suffered enough?”

Translated and edited by Luiseta Mudie.

Mercurial and combative Solomon Islands leader reaps benefits where he may

Solomon Islands Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare has maneuvered himself to the center of U.S.-China rivalry in the Pacific, stirring debate about his aims

To some, he’s an autocrat in waiting, and to others, a smart operator seeking to maximize aid for his volatile and economically-lagging nation.

A Seventh-Day Adventist who has a martial arts black belt, Sogavare is also a political brawler whose fortunes have fluctuated over the years alongside the frequent strife of Solomon Islands politics. 

After rising through the civil service in the 1990s, he is now in his fourth stint as prime minister. His first term, from June 2000 to December 2001, followed a coup, though he was elected by parliament – part of a chaotic period that resulted in a years-long military intervention in the Solomon Islands led by U.S. ally Australia.

Over time, Sogavare has become more adept at marshaling the levers of power in his favor, researchers say. Earlier this year he pushed a constitutional amendment through parliament that allowed elections, set for 2023, to be delayed on the basis the country couldn’t afford a national vote and a major sporting event – the Pacific Games – in the same year.

“He is totally driven by the desire to remain PM forever,” said Matthew Wale, leader of the opposition in the Solomon Islands parliament. “He grants the demands of anyone who will help him achieve that.”

Sogavare, 67, has increasingly tilted the government of the South Pacific archipelago of some 700,000 people towards China. In 2019, he switched diplomatic recognition to China from Taiwan – an unpopular move in the country’s most populous province, Malaita – and earlier this year, he signed a security pact with Beijing. 

China is helping to bankroll the Pacific Games in the Solomon Islands capital Honiara next year and is training the country’s police. Last weekend, more than 30 Solomons police officers headed to China for a month’s instruction in policing methods.  

Meanwhile, Sogavare signed up to a pact between Pacific island nations and the United States at a summit in Washington last month, in what one observer described as a pragmatic move.

“Solomon Islands, and Sogavare himself, needs good relations with traditional partners, despite Solomon Islands’ growing security ties with China,” said Mihai Sora, a Pacific analyst at the Lowy Institute and former Australian diplomat in the Solomon Islands.

“It’s not zero-sum for Sogavare, rather it’s about maximizing the potential benefits he can bring to his country. So pragmatism is the main driver, but there is also a personal element when push comes to shove.”

Mercurial and perplexing

Sogavare can seem a mercurial and perplexing figure to outsiders, and even for researchers and others who have spent years in the Solomon Islands. His office didn’t respond to a request for an interview.

At a regional meeting in July, Sogavare effusively greeted Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese with a hug following months of tensions with Australia, the largest donor to the Solomon Islands. 

But within weeks, Sogavare was threatening to ban foreign media from the Solomon Islands, after critical Australian coverage of its China links, and lashing out at perceived Australian government interference. Canberra had offered, clumsily, some analysts say, to pay for the Solomon Islands elections.

Australia's Prime Minister Anthony Albanese (left) meets with Solomon Islands Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare on the sidelines of the Pacific Islands Forum, in Suva, Fiji July 13, 2022. Credit: Pool via Reuters
Australia’s Prime Minister Anthony Albanese (left) meets with Solomon Islands Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare on the sidelines of the Pacific Islands Forum, in Suva, Fiji July 13, 2022. Credit: Pool via Reuters

In his address to the United Nations General Assembly last month, Sogavare said the Solomon Islands had been vilified in the media for joining most other countries in recognizing China. He also urged the United States to end its embargo on Cuba and thanked the Cuban government for training Solomon Islands medical students.

Sogavare credits his formative political ideas and skills to Solomon Mamaloni, a charismatic Solomon Islands leader who died in 2000. A staunch nationalist and man of the people who chewed betel nut and drank heavily, Mamaloni distrusted the West, Australia in particular, and U.S.-dominated institutions such as the International Monetary Fund and World Bank. 

Sogavare became Mamaloni’s protege in the late 1990s. Sogavare believed he was in contact with Mamaloni after his death, according to a biography of Mamaloni by Christopher Chevalier, and other sources.

“He was like a father to me, I was like his son and he taught me many things,” American anthropologist Alexis Tucker Sade quotes Sogavare as saying of Mamaloni in her 2017 doctoral dissertation on the Solomon Islands. 

Seances with spirits

In an interview with Tucker Sade, Sogavare described a four-hour encounter in his government office with Mamaloni’s spirit, one of a number of supernatural encounters with the former prime minister that Sogavare claimed to have had in the decade following his death. 

He also acknowledged being a heavy drinker around the turn of the century. Nowadays, he is widely said to abstain from alcohol.  

Sogavare’s seances are not out of the ordinary in the Solomon Islands, where strong traditional beliefs are mingled with Christianity’s emphasis on the afterlife, said Chevalier.

“He is his own man. But I don’t think he has forgotten the lessons of Mamaloni,” Chevalier said. “He has obviously learned how to strategize and how to bring people on board in the very complex horse-trading that goes on.”  

Not everyone in the Solomon Islands views the connection with Mamaloni positively. The former leader sought a strong and independent Solomon Islands, but his legacy, which at the time of his death included a country mired in corruption and ethnic strife, is debated.

“Some people may say Mamaloni is some kind of a political savior to them,” said Celsus Irokwato, an adviser to the premier of Malaita province. “I see him as one of those who have set the stage for the failures of Solomon Islands.” 

Sogavare stands out because he is unpredictable and doesn’t conform to local cultural norms for leadership, based on respect earned from constant community involvement, said Clive Moore, an emeritus professor at the University of Queensland and author of an encyclopedia of the Solomon Islands.

Sogavare’s parents were missionaries from the island of Choiseul in the Solomons, but he spent much of his early life in Papua New Guinea, where he was born in 1955, and in the Solomon Islands capital Honiara. 

“He doesn’t behave in a traditional manner. He’s a bit of a bully, I think, in the way that he yells at people, the way he yells in the parliament,” said Moore.

With his tilt to China, Sogavare may reap short-term political benefits such as from a successful staging of the Pacific Games, Moore said. But he could be storing up crises if increased Chinese involvement in the country results in economic domination rather than new skills, jobs and higher living standards for Solomon Islanders. 

“Eventually he is going to cause a big problem for another prime minister or for another government,” he said.

BenarNews is an RFA affiliated news service.

OPENING REMARKS BY MINISTER FOR HEALTH MR ONG YE KUNG AT THE MOH PRESS CONFERENCE TO UPDATE ON THE COVID-19 SITUATION ON 15 OCTOBER 2022

We are currently in a XBB wave. Daily cases are rising, and the 7-Day Moving Average (7DMA) is about 7,700 per day now. The week-on-week infection ratio hit a peak of 1.74 a few days ago on 10 October, and has started to trend down subsequently. This means cases are not accelerating. So hopefully the worst of the worst is over.

  1. The Omicron XBB subvariant is essentially a cross between BA.2.75 and BA.2.10. Within three weeks, it has out-competed every other subvariant. Therefore the current wave is pretty much driven by XBB.
  2. While it is driven by XBB, it is also contributed by reinfections. As I mentioned earlier in Parliament, because 75% of our population has already been infected, any new wave has to be contributed by reinfection. That is what we are seeing now. About one month ago, reinfections were still hovering at about 5% to 6% of daily cases but that has been rising steadily. Then it tapered off for a while, to about 15% to 16% for several days, it has gone up again in the last few days to 17% to 18%. While still increasing, it is no longer at a steep rise.
  3. From 8 to 14 October, the incidence rate of a COVID-19 naïve person getting infected was 162.5 infections per 100,000 person-days. But if you have been infected in the last one to three months, the probability of reinfection is very low – a very small fraction compared to somebody who is COVID-naïve. If you had your infection four to six months ago, or seven to 10 months ago, the probability goes up but it is still significantly lower than a COVID-naïve person. For somebody who got infected pre-Delta or during the Delta wave, his/her risk of being reinfected is almost the same as a COVID-naïve person. That is also what is driving the reinfections.
  4. There is now a divergence and weakening of the correlation between the number of cases and new hospitalisations. In mid-September, the number of hospitalisations compared to the number of infections was about half-half. By now, it is less than half. When we calculate the incidence rate of hospitalisation over the last four weeks, we see a slight reduction in the incidence of hospitalisation.
  5. There could be several reasons. One is of course the time lag, especially for the latest week ending 14 October. Another reason could be that XBB is indeed less severe. It could also be that reinfected cases tend to be more mild.
  6. What can we expect? Based on data that has just been presented, we have been working with experts from the Saw Swee Hock School of Public Health to model the wave, as we do for every wave. This is likely to be a short and sharp wave, driven by XBB, but contributed to a small extent by reinfections.
  7. Our model shows that we might well peak at around 15,000 7DMA daily cases. Within a week there are ups and downs, and for the weekends, people tend to hold back on visiting the doctor until Monday. We report Monday’s numbers on Tuesday, and that is why Tuesday’s numbers are always highest. So on a Tuesday, it is possible to see numbers like 20,000 to 25,000 cases.
  8. By around mid-November, we should see the wave subside. But as we always emphasise, topline figures are much less important. We are only looking at the topline numbers to see where we are in terms of the wave, and how it translates into hospital burden and hospital workload, which are what we should focus on.
  9. At this juncture, I should talk a bit about endemicity. We have never declared that COVID-19 is an endemic disease, like some countries have. We have never declared it is no longer a social or health threat. We much prefer to let actions and our lives speak for themselves.
  10. What we have done is that with every successive wave we have gone through, we relaxed the Safe Management Measures (SMMs) to the extent that now, almost everything has been dismantled, with the latest standing down of the Vaccination-Differentiated SMMs (VDS). So, in reality, having done all that, in effect, we are living with COVID-19 like it is an endemic disease.
  11. Endemicity does not mean you pretend the virus does not exist, or treat the virus as if it does not exist. On the contrary, endemicity means that we accept it exists, and take the necessary steps to live with it. So we must accept that some parts of our lives must change, in order for us to live with this virus. As much as possible, we do not want it to disrupt our normal lives, and therefore we try our very best to never go back to Circuit Breaker or Heightened Alert, or anything that severely disrupts our normal lives.
  12. We will take necessary precautions in order to manage the situation. What are some these precautions? I think there are at least four.
  13. One is personal responsibility. Test and isolate yourself when you are not feeling well. Wear your mask if unwell. If you are living with an elderly person, or want to interact with an elderly person, wear your mask. If you are infected, follow Protocol 1-2-3. Personal responsibility is very important.
  14. Two, from time to time when we have a wave like this, when hospitals come under additional pressure, we will have to restrict visitors.
  15. Three, also extremely important – keep our vaccinations up to date. Yesterday we started administration of the bivalent Moderna vaccine, and we had about 4,200 vaccinations yesterday. Our Joint Testing and Vaccination Centres (JTVC) operate on half-day today, and do not open on Sunday. If there is a lot of demand, we will open JTVCs on both days of the weekend. If we want to do that, we will start from next week, but we are monitoring the demand.
  16. If you are above 50, and your last shot was more than five months ago, consider walking into a JTVC to get the Moderna bivalent vaccine.
  17. These three areas – personal responsibility, cutting back on visitors at hospitals, and keeping vaccinations up to date – are part and parcel of living with COVID-19 as an endemic disease.
  18. There is a fourth set of measures that we cannot rule out – SMMs that we may have to reinstate should the situation worsen, but in a way that does not disrupt our normal lives. For example, maybe we put back our masks indoors, or indoors and outdoors, if the situation requires it. Two, as the Multi-Ministry Taskforce (MTF) earlier announced, we stepped down all VDS, but when the situation requires, we may have to step up VDS to an appropriate level, in order to protect those who are not up to date with their vaccination.
  19. We are monitoring the XBB wave closely, and its impact on the healthcare system to see if some of these measures are necessary. As of now, no decision has been taken, but we are watching the situation closely.

 

Source: Ministry of Health, Singapore

Visit by Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong to Australia from 16 to 18 October 2022

Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong will visit Australia (Canberra and Sydney) from 16 to 18 October 2022 for the 7th Singapore-Australia Annual Leaders’ Meeting. Established under the Singapore-Australia Comprehensive Strategic Partnership, the Annual Leaders’ Meeting is a key platform for the Prime Ministers of both sides to discuss bilateral cooperation and exchange views on regional and global developments.

In Canberra, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese will host Prime Minister Lee to dinner at his Official Residence. Both Prime Ministers will have a delegation meeting, which will be followed by a Joint Press Conference. In Sydney, Prime Minister Lee will meet senior business leaders and academics. Prime Minister Lee will be accompanied by Mrs Lee, Minister for Foreign Affairs Dr Vivian Balakrishnan, Minister for Trade and Industry Mr Gan Kim Yong, Members of Parliament Ms Foo Mee Har and Mr Saktiandi bin Supaat, as well as officials from the Prime Minister’s Office, Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Ministry of Trade and Industry.

During Prime Minister Lee’s absence, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Finance Lawrence Wong will be the Acting Prime Minister from 16October to 18 October 2022.

 

Source: Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Government of Singapore

State Visit by President Halimah Yacob to the Socialist Republic of Vietnam from 16 to 20 October 2022

President Halimah Yacob will make a State Visit to the Socialist Republic of Vietnam from 16 to 20 October 2022 at the invitation of President Nguyen Xuan Phuc. President Halimah’s visit reciprocates President Phuc’s State Visit to Singapore in February 2022. President Halimah will visit Hanoi, Bac Ninh province, and Ho Chi Minh City (HCMC). This visit reaffirms Singapore and Vietnam’s warm and longstanding relations, underpinned by mutual commitment to further step up bilateral cooperation.

 

In Hanoi, President Halimah will call on President Phuc, who will also host a State Banquet for President Halimah. President Halimah will also meet Communist Party of Vietnam Central Committee General Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong, Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh, National Assembly Chairman Vuong Dinh Hue, and Hanoi Party Committee Secretary Dinh Tien Dung.

 

President Halimah will visit the Vietnam-Singapore Industrial Park (VSIP) in Bac Ninh province. The 11 VSIPs across Vietnam today are a major component of our economic engagement, and have attracted US$17 billion in investments and created more than 300,000 jobs.

 

In HCMC, President Halimah will meet HCMC Party Committee Secretary Nguyen Van Nen, who will host a dinner for President Halimah. President Halimah will deliver opening remarks at the Singapore-Vietnam Business Roundtable organised by the Singapore Business Federation (SBF), and meet businesses based in Vietnam to hear their perspectives on Vietnam’s economic development and Singapore’s economic interest in Vietnam. President will attend a reception hosted for Overseas Singaporeans based in Vietnam.

 

President Halimah will be accompanied by Mr Mohamed Abdullah Alhabshee, Minister for Manpower and Second Minister for Trade and Industry Dr Tan See Leng, Senior Minister of State for Foreign Affairs and National Development Sim Ann, Members of Parliament Liang Eng Hwa, Cheryl Chan and Zhulkarnain bin Abdul Rahim, officials from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Ministry of Trade and Industry, Enterprise Singapore and the Institute of Technical Education.

 

During President Halimah’s absence, Mr Eddie Teo, Chairman of the Council of Presidential Advisers, will exercise the function of the Office of the President.

 

 

Source: Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Government of Singapore

PHILIPPINE MURAL BOAT SHINES AT LEMBEH STRAIT FESTIVAL 2022 IN MANADO

The Philippine boat in the Lembeh Strait Festival 2022 in Bitung City, North Sulawesi, Indonesia. The boat mural was designed by the Philippine Department of Tourism. (Manado PCG photo)

MANADO The Philippine Consulate General in Manado, led by Consul General Angelica C. Escalona, sponsored a Philippine mural boat which joined the fluvial parade of the Lembeh Strait Festival 2022 held on 06 October 2022 in Bitung City, in Indonesia’s North Sulawesi Province.

Over five thousand people witnessed a fleet of a hundred elaborately decorated boats sail the Lembeh Strait. Among the first boats to lead the fluvial parade was the Philippine boat.  Philippine textile patterns, vintas, beaches, and the Banaue Rice Terraces adorned the hull of the boat, drawing the attention of the spectators. The design of the boat was provided by the Philippine Department of Tourism (DOT).

The Lembeh Strait Festival is one of the top 110 national events carefully chosen from over 3,000 tourism events happening across Indonesia’s 34 provinces and promoted by the Indonesian Ministry of Tourism.

Along with its potential as a top tourist destination, Bitung City is positioning itself as a regional hub that will connect eastern Indonesia to the Asia-Pacific. The city has an integrated industrial, logistics, and export processing zone served by an international port for ocean-going ships which connects to the Manado international airport via the 39.9-km Manado-Bitung toll road. It has close relations with General Santos City and Davao City in the Philippines and hosts a Kampung Filipin or Philippine village, whose residents include many persons of Filipino descent.

 

Source: Republic of Philippines Department Of Foreign Affairs