CO129-518-9 The Mui-Tsai question- printed papers relating to the system 20-9-1929 - 1-11-1929 — Page 45

CO129 Colonial Office Hong Kong Records 理藩院香港檔案 All

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of their purchase and sale should be sent to the nearest police station for cancellation and registration in a register specially provided for the purpose; that no adopted daughters" should be ill-treated ; that they should be sent to school during the age of 12 to 16, and should not be married later than 23, but might be allowed to remain single if they chose; that no "adopted daughters" should be forced to become concubines; that adequate clothing, board and lodging should be provided for "adopted daughters according to the circumstances (of their "adopted parents "): that if any person should be discovered by the police to have beaten or maltreated an adopted daughter," the girl should be sent to a poor girls' home or an industrial school to be brought up, and that the person who ill- treated the girl should be fined as a warning; that when anybody, who had been fined for maltreating his adopted daughter," was then found to have maltreated her again, a greater fine or other punishment would be imposed.

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4. It is of course very important to know how far these fair- seeming regulations have been carried into practice, and I have made such enquiries as were possible on the subject. Mr. A. A. L. Tuson, the acting Consul-General at Canton, wrote to me on the 29th April that he had no reliable information as to the extent to which the regulations had been enforced. Mr. A. G. Major, His Majesty's Consul at Swatow, wrote to me on the same date as follows:---

"Whilst regulations prohibiting the mui-tsai system were promulgated locally over two years ago and are still nominally enforced, actually the practice still flourishes, though under a different name, "adopted daughter." At the time of the intro- duction of the prohibition all indentures were called in, and those that were surrendered were cancelled and destroyed, though no steps were taken, for obvious reasons, in the direction of liberating the vast numbers of girls concerned. I understand, however, that the application of the regulations has brought about some improvement in the treatment of mui-tsai orders for the release of whom to a philanthropic institution are made from time to time when charges of ill-treatment are brought and substantiated in the Chinese Court."

5. I also made enquiry from His Majesty's Consuls at Foochow and Amoy in the neighbouring province of Fukien. Mr. G. S. Moss, His Majesty's Consul at Foochow, wrote to me on the 2nd May that the Commissioner for Foreign Affairs at Foochow told him that there was no special legislation in Fukien province, dealing with the mui- tsai question. He added that the system was much less prevalent in Fukien than in Kwangtung and did not attract marked public attention. The Reverend W. P. W. Williams, of Trinity College, Foochow, wrote to Mr. Moss as follows:-

"All I know is that the practice is contrary to law and, when found out, is severely punished. It is reported by the Chinese

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