Houston Community News >> Chinese Surname Shortage
6/12/2007 BEIJING (AFP) - With 
more than a billion people now sharing just 100 surnames, Chinese authorities 
are considering a landmark move to try to end the confusion, state media 
reported Tuesday. 
Current Chinese law states that children are only allowed take the surname from 
either their mother or father, but the lack of variety means there are now 93 
million people in China with the family name Wang.
In a country of around 1.3 billion people, about 85 percent share only 100 
surnames, according to a nationwide survey conducted by the Ministry of Public 
Security in April and published in the China Daily newspaper on Tuesday.
The survey found 92 million people shared the surname Li, while 88 million were 
called Zhang. A further seven surnames -- including Chen, Zhou and Lin -- are 
held by at least 20 million Chinese.
Another report by the Chinese Academy of Sciences found at least 100,000 people 
share China's most popular name, Wang Tao.
Under a new draft regulation released by the ministry of public security, 
parents will be able to combine their surnames for their children, a move that 
could open up 1.28 million new possibilities, the China Daily reported.
For instance, a father named Zhou and mother named Zhu could choose to call 
their child either Zhou, Zhu, Zhouzhu or Zhuzhou, the report added.
Guan Xihua, a household registration officer with the Beijing public security 
bureau, said the lack of variety caused trouble in daily life and the new 
regulation would slash repetition.
Du Roufu, from the academy, said combined surnames had already become popular 
with younger couples even though such combinations were not strictly permitted 
by law.
The draft also allows ethnic minorities to register some letters and characters 
among new names, but bans any foreign letters.
Du said the move for ethnic minorities would encourage them to use traditional 
surnames and avoid the practice of taking Han Chinese surnames, which reduces 
the variety of names and harms their cultural heritage.
(Contributed by AP)