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China officially ends controversial one-child policy with effect from January 1

The ruling Communist Party had said that Beijing would loosen its decades-old one-child policy. But the plan for the change must be approved by the rubber-stamp parliament during its annual session in March.

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China has officially ended the controversial one-child policy, thus allowing couples to have two children, with effect from January 1, reports Xinhua.

All married couples will be allowed to have a second child but the legislation maintains limits on additional births.

In November, China's top family planning body had said the country must continue to enforce its one-child policy until new rules allowing all couples to have two children go into effect.

The ruling Communist Party had said that Beijing would loosen its decades-old one-child policy. But the plan for the change must be approved by the rubber-stamp parliament during its annual session in March.

The online statement by the National Health and Family Planning Commission contradicts a remark by a family planning official in the southern province of Hunan, who said last week that couples currently pregnant with a second child will not be punished, according to the Hunan Daily newspaper.

"Ahead of (ratification), all localities and departments must seriously implement the population and family planning laws and regulations currently in effect, maintain good order for births and must not act of their own accord," an unnamed official with the commission said in the statement.

About 90 million families may qualify for the new two-child policy, which would help raise the population to an estimated 1.45 billion by 2030, the planning commission had said in November. China, the world's most populous nation, had 1.37 billion people at the end of last year.

For decades, China harshly implemented the one-child policy, leading to forced abortions and infanticides across the country. Beijing loosened the policy in late 2013, allowing couples to have a second child where one partner was an only child, but as of June, only 1.5 million of the 11 million eligible couples had applied to expand their families, the official Xinhua news agency had reported. 

But experts have said that the shift to a two-child policy is likely too little, too late to address China's looming population crisis and that the Government was unlikely to dismantle enforcement mechanisms for reproductive control due to deeply entrenched bureaucratic interests.

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