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SINO DAILY
China study warns rural wealth gap near 'danger' level
by Staff Writers
Shanghai (AFP) Aug 22, 2012


S. Korea court recognises Chinese activist as refugee
Seoul (AFP) Aug 22, 2012 - A South Korean court has granted refugee status to a woman who fled China after helping escapees from North Korea there, saying she could face severe punishment from Beijing if sent back.

The Seoul Administrative Court ruled in favour of the woman, an ethnic Korean identified only as Lee, a court spokesman said Wednesday. It reversed the justice ministry's decision to deny her refugee status.

Lee, who lived near the border, said she had helped some 20 refugees flee North Korea until police raided her house in March last year. Her husband was arrested but Lee escaped with her daughter.

She arrived in South Korea via the Yellow Sea along with other refugees aboard a fishing boat.

The justice ministry refused to grant Lee refugee status, saying her claim lacked credibility.

South Korean courts rarely grant such status to ethnic Koreans with Chinese nationality. Lee is only the second.

But the administrative court ruled last week that she could face harsh punishment if returned to China. "In this case, her past activities to help refugees in China were recognised by the court," the spokesman told AFP.

China is North Korea's sole major ally and repatriates those North Korean refugees it catches. It also punishes people who help the refugees.

On March 29 China arrested Kim Young-Hwan and three other South Korean activists who had been trying to help fugitives from the North. They were held for almost four months before being deported.

Kim said in Seoul that Chinese agents beat him, stopped him from sleeping for days and tortured him with electric shocks to collect information on activities by his group and its Chinese helpers.

China denied the torture claims but the South's government urged it to investigate further.

China's countryside is facing a widening wealth gap as hundreds of millions of residents abandon farming for better paid work in cities, a report said, warning rural inequality was approaching "danger" levels.

The Centre for Chinese Rural Studies said inequality in rural areas was growing given the difference in incomes between those who farmed and those who flocked to cities as migrant workers.

"The difference in rural residents' income is getting bigger and pressure on living expenses is increasing," the centre said in a statement reported in state media on Wednesday.

China's growing wealth gap is a major concern for authorities keen to avoid public discontent that could lead to social unrest in the rapidly developing country of 1.3 billion people.

The centre, which has links to the state, estimated the Gini coefficient, a measure of inequality, was 0.3949 for rural residents last year, nearing what it called the "danger" level of 0.40, the statement said.

The commonly used Gini coefficient measure varies between 0 -- reflecting complete equality -- and 1, which indicates complete inequality.

China has not released a Gini coefficient for the country as a whole for more than a decade, amid worries over the widening income gap.

An official said in January that data on high income groups was incomplete to explain why the government had again failed to issue the statistic for 2011.

Rural residents who work as migrant labourers in cities earn twice as much as those who farm for a living, the official Xinhua news agency quoted the centre as saying, but gave no figures.

Although most migrant workers live in cities for most of the year, they are officially registered as rural residents.

As a result, incomes as a whole for rural households were rising sharply, with average cash income jumping more than 14 percent to around 38,894 yuan ($6,174) last year, the Xinhua report said.

Deng Dacai, deputy head of the centre, said the Gini coefficient for all of China was likely "well above" 0.40, Xinhua reported.

The government-backed Chinese Academy of Social Sciences estimated China's Gini coefficient at nearly 0.47 in 2005.

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