Baby
boom swallows
Children under 15 account for half of Con Se Village's population in the central
The tiny
So many houses have been built that
any new homes have to be built on the slippery, muddy banks of the island and
its canals. But they continue to be built, almost everyday.
The next thing you notice about Con
Se is that nearly everyone you see on the streets is a child, and any adult
you meet has numerous children in tow, even if the adults are still teenage
parents.
That's because the houses on Con Se
are not being built by new migrants, they're being built by young and
middle-aged couples from the island village that are each having 6-7 children
on average, with some having as many as 15.
However, it is a different story at
Con Se village, located off the coast of the central
According to official statistics, the
village’s population was more than 3,100 as of last year with children under
15 accounting for nearly half. There were more than 500 children under five.
Nguyen Anh Them, chairman of People’s
Committee in Quang Loc Commune -- the authority that governs the village
-- said local agencies have tried every solution to stop families from having
too many babies, but “it is too difficult.”
Villagers believe that the more
children they have, the wealthier they are, and they also need sons to
inherit their fishing boats and business. So, they keep giving birth to kids.
“In this village, most of families
have many children,” said Nguyen Thi Long, a 37-year-old mother of four boys
and three daughters.
“Some people that own big fishing
boats say that they will give birth to more so that they can have enough crew
members for their boats,” she said.
Overpopulation
Long said that
spondylosis, or spinal arthritis, keeps her husband from fishing offshore
these days. He stays at home, doing odd jobs and helping her fish near the
shore. However, their combined incomes are no longer enough to support their
growing family.
Long said she no longer brings in as
many fish from the local
“Perhaps with too many people
catching them, fish do not have enough time to reproduce,” she said.
The woman said she had to send three
of her children to live with her parents, parents-in-law, and her sister. She
also said that although their eldest child has recently found a job in the
south, there are times she has to borrow money to feed the rest.
“We gave birth to too many children,
and now both we and our children are in trouble,” she said.
With the increasing population and a
tendency towards early marriages at 17-18 years old, the demand for land to
build houses in Con Se has surpassed the six hectares of land available.
Despite being an island, the village
now looks like a crowded city where houses are built up against each other
without any spaces in between.
Nearly 100 families have even built
houses right next to the river, with concrete or makeshift materials,
regardless of the risk of flood and erosion.
Mai Thi H., a woman in her late
twenties with one child, lives in a house that was built a couple of months
ago on a muddy canal near the river on the outskirts of town. The house is
made from plastic canvases covering a wooden frame, and its wooden floor
moves with every step.
H. said she and her husband had moved
there because their parents did not have any land to give them after their
wedding.
She said they are worried most about
the stormy season. Whenever the river’s waters rise, they carry their child
to the middle of the village for shelter.
The house will eventually be swept
away, she admitted. But “it can’t be helped,” H. said.
According to local authorities, about
200 other families are waiting to be provided with land to build homes.
Nguyen Cuong, head of the village,
said that besides the shortage of land and general poverty, many people are
illiterate.
Most local children quit their
studies after fifth grade because their families cannot affordto keep sending
them to school, he said.
It is also because they have to find
a job to support their parents in raising their younger brothers and sisters,
according to Cuong.
Boys follow their brothers and
fathers to go fishing off shore when they are about 14-15 years old, while
girls follow their mothers to make fishing nets for sale. Some leave the
village to find jobs in the south, the official said.
The problems that go with having many
children are so visible in Con Se that a few newly-married couples have started
feeling reluctant to go with the trend.
Mai Hoang, 32, said seeing how other
families struggle with raising their kids, he and his wife, Pham Thi Huong,
24, do not want to have many children, and instead want to save money for
rebuilding their house.
He said they now have one two
year-old daughter, and planned to have the second child, when their daughter
is about five or seven years old.
However, authorities are not positive
that a change will take place in the village soon.
Hoang Thi Kim Ngan, director of Quang
Trach District’s Center for Population and Family Planning, said every year
local authorities organize campaigns to raise people’s awareness.
But, with low education level and
old-fashioned mindset, Con Se people do not want to listen when it comes to
birth control, she said.
Thanh Nien News
|
Thứ Bảy, 28 tháng 9, 2013
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