A letter
sent to Zhang by the family planning bureau of Binhu District of Wuxi
City, Jiangsu province in eastern China on Thursday demanded that he pay
a penalty for having two "beyond-the-quota" children.
The letter was posted on the district's official account on Sina Weibo, China's Twitter-like microblogging service.
The fine comes after Zhang apologized in an open letter for his "excessive children" in December. He and his wife, Chen Ting, admitted to having two sons and a daughter.
READ: 'I have 3 kids,' Chinese filmmaker admits
CHINA: Hong Kong Oscar-nominated Chinese filmmaker
Zhang Yimou has been fined 7.48 million yuan ($1.2 million) for
breaching China's one-child policy, authorities say.
"As a film director, it
takes a lot of efforts and good movies for people to remember you, but
having excessive children had ruined it all," he said, according to
Xinhua, China's state news agency. "I sincerely apologize to everyone on
my 'excessive children' case. I admit it's my mistake and I won't blame
others for it."
"I will learn my lessons, and I'm willing to cooperate with any investigation from family planning commission," Zhang said.
Local officials in
Jiangsu province calculated the fine based on the couple's combined
annual income, the document stated. Nine investigation teams had been
sent to "collect evidence" since November.
The couple have to pay the fine within 30 days of receiving the letter, local authorities added.
Zhang's case comes after China adopted new rules to ease its one-child policy in December.
The Standing Committee
of the National People's Congress passed a resolution to allow couples
to have two children if one of the parents was an only child, according to Xinhua.
Previously, a couple was only allowed a second child if both of them were only children.
However, Zhang, best
known for movies such as "Red Sorghum," "Raise the Red Lantern," and
"Hero," is unlikely to benefit from the change.
Zhang's breach of the
policy has set off a firestorm, especially among some netizens who
resent how the rich and famous in China flout rules and policies.
"Is this really a huge
sum? Do you people know how much he makes from a single film? Some are
saying that the fines are too heavy. All I can say is that this is
nothing to him," Sina Weibo user__729_ wrote on China's equivalent of
Twitter.
But Zhang also had his defenders.
"Zhang is a good fellow," wrote Sarah2007 on Sina Weibo.
"Even though the social
maintenance fee is a ridiculous and shameless rip off, which no one
knows what use it will be put to, he knows he has no choice, as a public
figure, but to accept the fines with a with an earnest attitude."
The filmmaker also directed the opening and closing ceremonies of the 2008 Beijing Olympics.
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