In the country where the average woman has nine abortions...
Russians offered day off, prizes to procreate
Officials hope ‘Day of Conception’ will help turn around declining birthrate
The Kartuzov family, shown in June 2007, drive away in their new UAZ-Patriot SUV, which they won as a grand prize in a regional contest titled "Give Birth to a Patriot on Russia's Independance Day."
AP
Russians more concerned with ruble than Obama
Putin's drop kick adds to 'tough guy' image
In Russia, Obama beats McCain
Interactive: Forgotten conflicts
Learn about some of the oft-forgotten clashes simmering across the globe.
Most popular
• Most viewed • Top rated • Most e-mailed
'Stewmaker' stirs horror in Mexico
Resolve to eat better? Avoid these 20 foods
Some new relief as Americans file 2008 taxes
Bachelor walks his way to 229-pound loss
Obama gives first interview to Arabic network
Most viewed on msnbc.com
Afghan girls return to school after acid attacks
Man freezes to death after city limits electricity
Wall Street's entitlement culture hard to shake
Hudson River pilot receives hero's welcome
5 more stranded whales die in Australia
Most viewed on msnbc.com
Some new relief as Americans file 2008 taxes
Obama gives first interview to Arabic network
Man freezes to death after city limits electricity
Rise in infant suffocation tied to bed-sharing
Albrecht to stay in induced coma until lungs heal
Most viewed on msnbc.com
updated 5:24 p.m. CT, Tues., Aug. 14, 2007
MOSCOW - A Russian region best known as the birthplace of Vladimir Lenin has found a novel way to fight the nation’s birthrate crisis: It has declared Sept. 12 the Day of Conception and for the third year running is giving couples time off from work to procreate.
The hope is for a brood of babies exactly nine months later on Russia’s national day. Couples who “give birth to a patriot” during the June 12 festivities win money, cars, refrigerators and other prizes.
Ulyanovsk, a region on the Volga River about 550 miles east of Moscow, has held similar contests since 2005. Since then, the number of competitors, and the number of babies born to them, has been on the rise.
Story continues below ↓
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
advertisement | your ad here
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alexei Bezrukov and his wife, Yulia, won a 250,000 ruble prize — equivalent to $10,000 — in June after she gave birth to a baby boy, Andrei. Bezrukov said patriotism wasn’t their motive for having a child, their third, although the money was welcome.
“It was a patriotic atmosphere, you know when everyone around is celebrating, but I wasn’t thinking of anything but my son,” he said. “The whole thing is great, it’s great to get 250,000 rubles when you have a new baby to take care of.”
Sparsely populated country
Russia, with one-seventh of the Earth’s land surface, has just 141.4 million citizens, making it one of the most sparsely settled countries in the world. With a low birthrate and very high death rate, the population has been shrinking since the early 1990s.
It is now falling by almost half a percent each year. Demographic experts expect the decline to accelerate, estimating that Russia’s population could fall below 100 million by 2050.
In his state of the nation address last year, President Vladimir Putin called the demographic crisis the most acute problem facing Russia and announced a broad effort to boost Russia’s birthrate, including cash incentives to families to have more than one child.
Click for related content
Russia opens terror probe into train derailment
Ulyanovsk Governor Sergei Morozov has added an element of fun to the national campaign.
When he held the first competition in 2005, 311 women signed up to take part — and qualify for a half-day off from work. In June 2006, 46 more babies were born in Ulyanovsk’s 25 hospitals than in June of the previous year, including 28 born on June 12, officials in the governor’s office said.
More than 500 women signed up for the second contest on Sept. 12, 2006. Exactly nine months later, 78 babies, triple the region’s daily average, were born. They were welcomed into the world as Russia’s national anthem was played, the officials said.
Steadily rising birthrate
Since the campaign began, the birthrate in the region has risen steadily and is up 4.5 percent so far this year over the same period in 2006, according to the regional administration’s Web site.
Everyone who has a baby in an Ulyanovsk hospital on Russia Day gets some kind of prize. But the grand prize winners are couples judged to be the fittest parents by a committee that deliberates for two weeks over the selection.
The 2007 grand prize went to Irina and Andrei Kartuzov, who received a UAZ-Patriot, an SUV made in Ulyanovsk. They told reporters they were planning to have another child anyway when they heard about the contest.
Irina Kartuzova had to have a Caesarian section to deliver the baby and it was scheduled for June 12.
The selection committee chose the Kartuzovs from among the 78 couples because of their “respectability” and “commendable parenting” of their two older children, a spokesman for the governor said.
Other contestants won video cameras, TVs, refrigerators and washing machines.
Under the federal program, women who give birth to a second or subsequent child are to receive certificates worth $10,000, which can be used to pay for education or to improve the family’s living conditions.
Monthly support payments were raised this year to $60 from $28.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment