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About other countries controlling population growth

India implemented it earlier than China. But the effect is not as good as China. Some countries’ control is to encourage births, such as Russia

It once launched a compulsory sterilization campaign

< p>India is actually one of the first countries in developing countries to implement family planning policy. As early as 1952, India launched a nationwide family planning campaign. In the mid-1970s, the Indian Congress Party government launched a compulsory sterilization campaign, stipulating that one of the couples of childbearing age with two or more children must undergo sterilization surgery (mainly male sterilization). Many sterilization camps have been established across India, and officials have stepped in to urge them. As a result, a rare scene in Indian history occurred. Truck after truck of qualified men were taken to the sterilization camp for surgery. Many of them were forcibly escorted to the operating table by the police. According to statistics, from April to September 1976, 3.7 million Indians were sterilized. In the busiest month of September, 1.3 million people were sterilized, and some sterilization camps performed more than 2,000 operations a day. Because the movement went too far, it caused strong dissatisfaction among the people. In 1977, the Congress government collapsed and the compulsory sterilization policy was discontinued. Since then, the Indian government has no longer adopted strong measures in implementing family planning.

Now there is no limit on the number of children.

The family planning programmatic document that India currently follows is the "National Population Policy 2000" issued in 2000. The basic principle of India's population policy is that the government encourages, helps, and guides birth control, but on the premise that it is voluntary and does not limit the number of births. The short-term goal of the national population policy is to solve the problem of contraception, health infrastructure, medical staff, etc.

South Korea does not have family planning, but with the recent tough response of the South Korean government "not to change the planning policy due to the protest plan", a handful Hollywood's plan to impose family planning on Korean movies has reached its neck.

[Korea Family Planning]

Reference: /12764/2007/04/12/2225@1543145.htm