2019-10-12_The_Economist_

(C. Jardin) #1

46 TheEconomistOctober 12th 2019


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T


he beatings were so brutal that Dong
Fang (not her real name) was left par-
tially deaf, and her daughter needed three
stitches in her hand. Not long ago, China’s
courts would probably have ignored such
an assault, because the attacker was both
Ms Dong’s husband and the girl’s father.
Luckily for the victims, however, the coun-
try had recently enacted a domestic-vio-
lence bill. This enabled Ms Dong to obtain a
restraining order from a court in Chengdu,
the south-western city where she lives. Lo-
cal media praised this as an example of the
new law in action. Later came the shock.
The same court rejected Ms Dong’s petition
for divorce. It reasoned that the marriage
was still on a “very firm” foundation and
the husband should be given “a chance”,
the judge told a newspaper in Beijing.
Ms Dong’s plight is common. The law on
domestic violence, which took effect in
March 2016, aims to protect women. But it
is also intended to “promote family harmo-
ny and social stability”. Judges often con-

sider this more important than women’s
well-being. A study of 150,000 divorce
cases filed between 2009 and September
2016, more than two-thirds of them by
women, found the new law had done little
to help female victims. When people file
their first petition for divorce (many have
several tries), judges are more likely to
agree if the plaintiff is a man. They are usu-
ally unswayed by claims of violence. “For
abused women, courts are the problem,
not the solution,” says the study’s author,
Ethan Michelson of Indiana University.
China’s leader, Xi Jinping, is a champion
of tradition. He describes families as the
“cells” of society (mention of Mr Xi’s di-
vorce from his first wife in 1982, after only
three years of marriage, is taboo). Officials

fear those cells are decaying as marriage
rates fall and divorce rates soar. Last year
more than 10m couples tied the knot and
nearly 4.5m undid it. This is partly because,
for many people, divorce has become much
easier. Before 2003 it needed approval from
an employer or community leader. Now, if
both partners agree, they can quickly un-
marry at a local civil-affairs bureau.
But the one-in-six cases that end up in
court are complicated. Last year two-thirds
of them were rejected at the first hearing.
Domestic violence has been a legal ground
for divorce and damages since 2001. But
abused spouses often remain trapped.
Sometimes judges refuse to approve di-
vorces for the sake of their own jobs. Per-
formance targets often involve finishing a
certain number of cases. As citizens be-
come more litigious, caseloads are growing
fast. For judges, saying no to a divorce is
usually quicker than arranging one.
Some judges also fear that the anger of
an aggrieved party may lead to violence. So
when a man threatens to murder his
wife—or the judge—if a divorce goes
through, courts often prefer to keep the
marriage together. Poor odds of success in
highly contentious divorce cases dissuade
women from attempting divorce in the
first place, says Leta Hong Fincher, the au-
thor of “Leftover Women: The Resurgence
of Gender Inequality in China”.
Possibly helped by public attention to

Domestic violence

No escape


Courts deny abused wives divorces in the name of social harmony

China


47 EmergencypowersinHongKong
48 Chaguan: Lessons from Tiananmen

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