http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2010-01/06/content_12766086.htm

 
      First domestic genetics-based discrimination charges filed 
     
     
     
          BEIJING, Jan. 6 -- Three civil servant candidates have filed 
discrimination charges against the Foshan Human Resources and Social Security 
Bureau at a local court in Guangdong Province after being denied employment for 
carrying the genes for Mediterranean anemia, reports the China Youth Daily.

          The three young men, surnamed Zhou, Xie and Tang, passed the written 
test and interview rounds of the Foshan Civil Servant Recruitment Test last 
April. 

          But during an extra genetic checkups, they were found to be carriers 
of Mediterranean anemia genes and denied admission to the civil service, even 
though carriers of this gene show no symptoms of disease and can function 
properly in daily life and routine work. 

          They argue that their physical conditions meet the standards mandated 
for civil servants. Their vital signs are within the normal range and none of 
them exhibit any anemia symptoms as described in the civil servant health 
standards. 

          This is the first legal case in China to deal with discrimination 
against carriers of certain genes. The local court has placed the case on file. 

          Mediterranean anemia is not contagious and the most common symptoms 
are fatigue and weakness due to the lack of oxygen being distributed throughout 
the body. Sufferers of the disorder may also experience shortness of breath, 
unusual paleness, or a yellowing of the skin called jaundice. 

          Li Chunfu, an expert on Mediterranean anemia, said that around 12 
percent of local people carry similar genes. "This huge group can live a normal 
life and it is improper to say they failed the physical checkup," he said. 

          "Conducting extra physical checkup items is absolutely prohibited by 
the government," said Lu Jun, from the Beijing Yirenping Center, a social 
service organization focusing on anti-discrimination. "And discrimination based 
on gene checkups must be stopped immediately," he said. 

          "Everyone carries numerous and different genes," Lu explained; "if we 
allow such checkups, none of us can escape gene discrimination." 

           (Source: CRIENGLISH.com)
     




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