He Shenguo was sentenced to
death for stabbing the officials to death in the southwestern province of
Guangxi in 2013, he was executed on Thursday, the China News Service said.
Under regulations introduced in the late 1970s and suddenly abolished late last month, China limited most families to having one child.
Under regulations introduced in the late 1970s and suddenly abolished late last month, China limited most families to having one child.
Authorities used permits,
fines, and in some cases forced sterilisations and late-term abortions to
enforce the rules, sometimes brutally, especially in poorer provinces such as
Guangxi.
He had “illegally fathered
a fourth child”, and did not pay fines levied against him for fathering extra
children, reports said at the time.
Officials responsible for
enforcing birth restrictions denied his children essential documents allowing
them to qualify for benefits, the reports added.
The angry father then
staged the deadly attack in revenge, injuring four other people in the process,
they said.
China says the rules often
known as the “one child policy” prevented food shortages and laid the
foundations for the country’s recent decades-long economic boom.
Critics argue they fuelled
a large gender imbalance in China, where almost 118 boys were born for every
100 girls in 2012.
Beijing announced late last
month that it would allow all couples to have two children, after signs the
population is ageing rapidly and with a shrinking workforce adding to the
challenges of slowing economic growth.
Experts say the adjustment
may not be enough to tackle China’s demographic problems, as many couples now
choose to have one child.
China News
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