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Lanzhou City Foundling Care Management Interim Provisions

Original Language Title: 兰州市弃儿救护管理暂行规定

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(Summit 7th ordinary meeting of the Government of the Lands of 21 April 2005 to consider the adoption of Decree No. [2005] of 22 April 2005] of the Order of the People's Government of the State of the Interior, effective 1 June 2005)

Chapter I General
Article 1, in order to protect the physical and mental health and basic rights of children and unaccompanied, promotes the healthy development of children throughout the city, in line with the relevant national legislation, regulations and related provisions, and develop this provision in the context of the present city.
Article 2
Article 3. The principle of the separation of patriarchal ambulances and social ambulances is governed by local jurisdiction, rapid collection, timely rescue and identification of abandoned persons and escorts.
The management of paediatric care is governed by the Government's unified leadership, division of labour and responsibility for the implementation of the human system.
Article IV. Governments at all levels should gradually increase their input to the cause of child welfare and include the development of child welfare institutions in socio-economic development planning and annual plans to adapt the level of development of child welfare to the situation of building a small society at the local level.
Governments at all levels should include childcare treatment fees, disability redress payments, parenting fees, education fees, deserters' identification fees, complaints and management fees in the current financial budget and ensure availability.
Article 5
The district, the civil affairs sector is responsible for the management of abandoned patriarchal care within the current administration and is operationally subject to the uniform coordination and guidance of the municipal civil affairs sector.
The communes, the people of town and the street offices are responsible for the management of paternal care in the area under this jurisdiction, and are operationally subject to uniform coordination and guidance in the district, district civil affairs.
The municipal, district and district public safety, health, medical, financial and educational administrations should work together to avoid patriarchal service management in accordance with their respective responsibilities.
Article 6 provides incentives to the executive branch, business units and individuals that have made a significant contribution and notable achievement in the management of paediatric care, either in the city, in the district, in the Government of the people or in the municipal administration.
Chapter II
Any unit or individual found abandoned children should be collected and reported to local public safety.
The reported public safety dispatch should prove that it will help to collect the release of abandoned children to local government-designated ambulances and rescue.
After the hospital was abandoned, local child welfare institutions should be informed on time.
Unless the statutory process is adopted, the rapists and any other unit or individual shall not be allowed to abandon their own adoption or send to others for adoption.
Article 8
Other hospitals that have not been designated as abandoned patriarchal hospitals should be held under the unified organization of the sanitary administrative authorities in order to meet the obligations of abandoned children in line with their technical, medical conditions and economic income.
Article 9. After having abandoned paternal hospitals, medical personnel should be organized in a timely manner to carry out health inspections and record-keeping; timely treatment of diseases and the establishment of detailed illnesses, after the outbreak of specific vouchers and medical diagnostic certificates; and disability certificates should also be given.
Article 10
(i) A summary of the accounts with temporary mattresses at the hospital for rescue, and a breakdown of paediatric treatment or inpatient funding;
(ii) The identification of abandoned persons within three months from the date of receipt by the public security sector of the report of the collector;
(iii) From the date of receipt by the public security sector of the report on the collection of the report, the search for less abandoned persons within three months, or the identification of the abandoned, has proved to be unable to assume, and the provision of a breakdown of the accounts will be presented by the hospital to its authorities for the review and accompanying written observations, the district, civil affairs sector should be reviewed within five days and submitted written requests to the same financial sector, and the financial sector shall be paid in a timely manner.
Hospitals are rescued and cannot be profited.
Chapter III Disclosure
Article 11. The search of the abandoned person is vested in the public security sector, in collaboration with the commune, the Government of the town, the street office and the civil affairs sector.
After having received reports of abandoned children by public security officers, the deserters should be searched in a timely manner. High-level organs of the Public Security Service should harmonize the search for the abandoned person; if necessary, the public security sector in the relevant areas could be brought to the search for and could be found in the media.
The communes, the Government of the town and the street offices should organize the mass and related units of the communes and actively cooperate with the public security sector to locate the abandoned.
Article 12 concerned departments, relevant units and residents' committees, villagers' councils should actively support and cooperate with public security officers to locate abandoned persons.
The founders, collecters and other informed individuals who have abandoned their children should, if they were actually dispatched to the public safety station, provide the floor and reflect the relevant situation.
Article 13. The public security sector should criticize the founding deserters by forcing them to return to their homes, assume the costs incurred and remorse; and bring criminal responsibility to the judiciary in accordance with the law.
Chapter IV
Article 14.
In order to find out the homelessness of the abandoned person within three months from the date of receipt of the report, the public security sector should be responsible for the formal adoption of the abandoned child by the civil affairs sector with the relevant investigative material, the preparation of the report and the identification of the transferee, the local civil affairs sector.
Article 15. The adoption of a child's welfare institution may also be adopted by a citizen in accordance with the conditions of adoption but shall be governed by the law.
Where no child welfare institution is established, it should concentrate on the adoption of abandoned children's welfare institutions, but the zones and the zone governments should bear part of the requirements for the conservation of abandoned children.
Voluntary adoption of paediatrics in this city and in the field should be strictly reviewed in accordance with the prescribed procedures; appropriate procedures should be granted and processed for compliance with national adoption laws, regulations and regulations and their own conservation and educational capacity.
Article 16
(i) Adoption by the Child Welfare Agency, by which child welfare agencies apply to the public security sector in accordance with the prescribed procedures;
(ii) Civil adoption in accordance with the law by the adoptor to apply to the public security sector in accordance with the prescribed procedures.
The public security sector should be approved in a timely manner for abandoned children, in accordance with the principle of proximity and accessibility.
Article 17
Article 18
(i) Acceptance of domestic and international social donations;
(ii) Other legitimate sources.
Funding for paediatric conservation must be earmarked and should not be diverted.
The financial, audit and civil affairs sectors should guide and monitor the mobilization, management and use of childcare conservation funds.
Chapter V Protection of rights
Article 19 prohibits any act of abandonment, discrimination and abuse of children.
The public security sector should strengthen the protection of abandoned children, to detect, in a timely manner, abandonment, discrimination and abuse of children, and to deal with them in accordance with the law; and to bring criminal justice to the judiciary in cases of serious offences.
Article 20 should strengthen the guidance, coordination, monitoring and management of child-saving care institutions, understand the conservation of abandoned children and help address practical difficulties in child-saving work and effectively uphold the basic rights and interests of abandoned children in accordance with the law.
Article 21 Health administrative authorities should organize hospitals, clinics and other health-care institutions to provide rescue and medical services for abandoned children.
The second article of the education sector should ensure that nine years of compulsory education are granted to school-age children who are able to attend school.
Schools should be exempted from school fees, books, etc. for school attendance at primary, secondary and secondary schools; for children enrolled in various schools at all other levels, schools should be exempted from the corresponding costs on a case-by-case basis and other assistance measures to support their completion.
Article 23 of the Judicial Administration and its competent legal aid management body should organize legal services such as the Accreditation, the grass-roots legal service providers and their legal service staff to provide legal assistance for the protection of paternity rights.
The application for legal assistance of abandoned children may be made by the civil service, the public security sector or the adoptor who has abandoned their children, or by community organizations that have abandoned their children.
Article 24. Child welfare institutions should strengthen internal management, establish sound management systems and job responsibilities, regulate working protocols, improve service levels, continuously improve the living conditions of abandoned children and ensure child health growth.
Relevant administrative authorities and utilities, such as planning, land, construction, transport, should be supported and helped to build child welfare institutions, and the costs associated with them are reduced and excluded in accordance with the relevant provisions of national and provincial governments.
Article 25
Annex VI
Article 26