China slow to awake to need for sex education

By Staff
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SHANGHAI, Apr 21 (Reuters) When Lao Li was a boy, sex was never discussed at home or school.

Little wonder, then, a visit to Shanghai's Sex Culture Museum with its exhibits of 1,000-year-old dildos and Ming dynasty pornographic porcelain stunned him.

''It's the first time I've seen anything like this,'' said 30-something Li. ''This should be taught at secondary school.

Not even my parents taught me about sex.'' In pre-communist China, sex was less a taboo than it became under former leader Mao Zedong, whose own highly active -- and disease-ridden -- love life was chronicled by his doctor in a book banned in China.

Under Mao, sex was officially a matter of doing one's reproductive duty for the state. He wanted a new labour force to build a new country and the state encouraged high birth rates.

Since then, the government has embarked upon a stern family planning policy to control a booming population -- the world's largest -- but official attitudes towards sex remain puritan, though they are changing slowly.

They need to change faster, health experts say.

There has been a huge rise in pre-marital and teenage sex.

According to state media, 70 per cent of urban youth admitted to having premarital sex in 2004, up from just 15 per cent in 1989.

HIV/AIDS in China is now increasingly spreading via sexual transmission, which risks exacerbating a problem that already afflicts an estimated 650,000 Chinese.

Ignorance and fear are widespread.

State media has said that some 70 per cent of unmarried male migrant workers do not use condoms, and of the 6 million commercial sex workers in China, only a fifth or so use protection.

''Sixty per cent of young people in China think you can get HIV by sharing chopsticks with someone,'' lamented Ken Legins, head of UNICEF's HIV/AIDS programme in the country.

SEXUAL MISSION But Liu Dalin, a retired sociology lecturer from Shanghai's prestigious Fudan University and the curator of the city's sex museum, has made it his mission to educate.

''Making love shows you have culture,'' the sexagenarian Liu told Reuters. ''People have two natures, one like an animal and the other cultural -- animals have no culture.

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