Home » “Nationalization” is coming again: Shaanxi “encourages” private schools to donate to the government | Civil to Public | Shaanxi Province

“Nationalization” is coming again: Shaanxi “encourages” private schools to donate to the government | Civil to Public | Shaanxi Province

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Beijing time:2021-11-10 02:30

[New Tang Dynasty News November 10, 2021 Beijing time]The CCP has forcibly promoted the conversion of private schools to public ones, and private schools have “taken the initiative to ask for donations to the government.” A few days ago, the Shaanxi Provincial authorities of the Communist Party of China publicly stated that they “encourage” private schools to donate and transfer to the local government.

According to Lu Media, on November 5th, at a series of press conferences organized by the Shaanxi Provincial Government of the Communist Party of China, Gao Ling, deputy director of the Provincial Department of Education, declared that the province will “fully promote the development of standardized private compulsory education” and “encourage” privately-run compulsory education. The organizers of compulsory education schools hand over the schools to the local government by means of “donations”, “transfers”, etc., and establish them as public schools to ensure that compulsory education is mainly provided by public schools or purchased services from the government.

Gu Guoping, a retired teacher at a university in Shanghai, told Radio Free Asia that the above requirements are reminiscent of the so-called “public-private partnership” era in the early days of the Chinese Communist Party.

In those days, the CCP used a “public-private partnership” to snatch almost all the assets of private enterprises. A large number of private business owners were persecuted, and many committed suicide by jumping off the building. However, the CCP’s method of achieving “public-private partnership” is that private companies, under the threat of the authorities, “take the initiative to apply” to the government.

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In recent years, the CCP has promoted the “national advancement and private retreat”, and educational institutions have not been spared. A large number of private primary and secondary schools have been forced to turn into public schools.

On July 8, the Ministry of Education and other eight departments of the Communist Party of China jointly issued the “Notice on Regulating the Establishment or Participation of Private Compulsory Education Schools in Public Schools”, requiring “public participation in the private” schools, that is, private, public schools and public schools independently organized by public schools. Compulsory schools co-sponsored by local governments and related institutions should be established as public schools, and the government will no longer approve new “public participation in the public” schools.

On July 28, the Huaiyang No. 1 Senior High School held a preparatory meeting for the “public transfer” work. Prior to this, the principal of the school, Wang Yesheng, had formally handed over the “Report on School Donations from Huaiyang No.1 High School” to the relevant departments to donate the school as a whole to the local government.

Prior to this, many provinces had relatively successful primary and secondary schools with “public transfers”. According to local media reports, as of late May, Chongqing City has clarified that 10 “public participation and public participation” schools have been converted to public operations. In July, Taiyuan, Shanxi, also announced the conversion of nine “public-counsel-min” primary and secondary schools to public offices.

When the party media reported that these schools were “private-to-public”, they almost all emphasized the “benefits” brought to student families, including lowering tuition fees, but basically did not mention the government’s compensation policy for these private schools.

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(Reporter Zheng Gusheng Comprehensive Report / Chief Editor: Lin Qing)

The URL of this article: http://cn.ntdtv.com/gb/2021/11/09/a103264677.html

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