QGDGXQ

QGDGXQ (Chinese: 全国打拐解救儿童寻亲 pinyin: quánguó dǎguǎi jiějiù értóng xún qīn English: National Crackdown Tracing Rescued Children) is China's system for identifying and reuniting kidnapped children with their parents. The program's national database, run by the Ministry of Civil Affairs, went online on 19 September 2015. The database contains children's personally identifiable information as well as DNA profiles which are matched to the profiles of parents collected by local police departments.[1]

Within two days of the program's launch, more than two million people visited the site and 284 freed children were identified.[1]

See also

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.