Document Name: | Resident Identity Card |
Using Jurisdiction: | China |
Document Type: | Identity card |
Purpose: | Identification |
Eligibility: | Hukou registration required |
Size: | 85.60mm×54.00mm×1.00mm |
Cost: | Registration fee: RMB20, Replacement for lost or damaged cards: RMB40 |
Valid Jurisdictions: | People's Republic of China |
The Resident Identity Card is an official identity document for personal identification in the People's Republic of China. According to the second chapter, tenth clause of the Resident Identity Card Law, residents are required to apply for resident identity cards from the local Public Security Bureau, sub-bureaus or local executive police stations.[1]
Prior to 1984, citizens within the People's Republic of China were not required to obtain or carry identification in public.[2] On April 6, 1984, the State Council of the People's Republic of China passed the Identity Card Provisional Bill (Chinese: 中华人民共和国居民身份证试行条例), commencing the process of gradual introduction of personal identification, in the footsteps of many developed countries at the time. The first generation identification cards were single paged cards made of polyester film. Between 1984 and 1991, trials for the new identity card system took place in Beijing, Shanghai and Tianjin. Shan Xiurong (Chinese: 单秀荣), a Chinese Opera performer and soprano from Beijing, was the first person to receive a first-generation identity card in China.[3]
On September 6, 1985, the Standing Committee of the 12th National People's Congress passed the Identity Card Bill of the People's Republic of China, which regulated that all citizens over the age of 16 apply for identification cards.[4] At that point, the Ministry of Public Security of the People's Republic of China created a unified authority responsible for the issuing and management of the ID cards. From 2003, it is reported that a total of 1.14 billion ID cards have been created in China,[5] for a total of 960,000,000 holders. However, as a result of technological development and certain techniques made available to the civilian population, the existing cards became relatively easier to counterfeit, opening the increasing threat of false identification.
On June 1, 2003, the National People's Congress passed the new Resident Identity Card Law,[1] which expanded the scope of documents issued, and allowed soldiers in the People's Liberation Army and members of the People's Armed Police to apply for special identity cards. Individuals under the age of 16 were also permitted to voluntarily apply for an identification card. The law also established the use of newer, second-generation cards, which are machine-readable and more difficult to forge.
The identity card contains basic information regarding the individual, such as the following:
Information stored in the identity database for second-generation ID cards includes work history, educational background, religion, ethnicity, police record, medical insurance status, landlord's phone number and personal reproductive history. In addition, more detailed personal information can be obtained by viewing hukou information from the card database. Starting on January 1, 2013, Beijing has started trials to include fingerprints in the ID cards, making it more difficult to forge ID cards or for people to use the ID cards of others.
In 1984, discussion over the contents of the identity card became controversial regarding whether to include details such as "marital status" and "occupation"; considering the actual situation of the People's Republic of China at the time, these details ultimately were not included in the ID card.
The first-generation ID cards contained a black-and-white photograph portrait of the individual; following the introduction of the second-generation cards, all identification portraits are printed in colour. From 1 January 2013 a mandatory switch to the second-generation cards came into force; all first-generation cards became void and unusable. If used, first-generation cards are treated as expired ID cards, and will not be accepted. It is a criminal offense to accept first-generation ID cards if the person who accepts it knows that it is a first-generation card.
The dimensions of the second-generation cards are 85.725 mm × 53.975 mm × 0.900 mm, and the identity photo is sized at 358 × 441 pixels (width by height), printed at a resolution of 350dpi on RGB using 24-bit True Color, prepared using JPEG compression techniques in line with the requirements of ISO DIS 10918-1. The final image appears as a 26 mm × 32 mm portrait box in the top-right hand corner.
Within the ethnic minority regions in China, identity cards possess corresponding text in the respective minority language for both first-generation and second-generation cards. For example, cards officially signed and issued in Guangxi all contain accompanying text in Zhuang, as well as Chinese characters. According to the fourth clause of the Resident Identity Card Law, "based on the de facto situation within the organs of self-government within autonomous ethnic regions, the content of the resident identity card can, alongside Chinese characters, be decided to include the text of the ethnic group exercising regional autonomy or choice of a local generic text".[6] This law permits resident identity cards within designated ethnic minority regions to have bilingual text, and depending on region, cards may contain accompanying text in Zhuang, Uyghur, Yi, Tibetan, Mongolian or Korean.
Ethnic minority residents represented by the local autonomous region can apply to have an additional ethnic minority language displayed on their identity cards, whilst Han Chinese and other ethnic residents' cards only have Chinese characters displayed. Ethnic minorities within their representative autonomous regions can have their personal name displayed in both their native language and Chinese characters; for example, within Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, a card belonging to a Uyghur may display the cardholder's name as "" (Effendi Nasreddin), however ethnic Kazakhs and Xibe people living in Xinjiang may only have their names written in Chinese. The following table shows the languages used on identity cards within minority regions:
Field | Simplified Chinese (Pinyin) | Tibetan (Wylie) | Uyghur (ROM: ULY) | Nuosu (Yi pinyin) | Korean (McCune–Reischauer) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Name | Chinese: 姓名 (xìngmíng) | SINGQMINGZ | (rus ming) | (oboɣ ner-e) | (nami) | ꑫꂓ (xyt hmi) | Korean: 이름 (irŭm) | |
Gender | Chinese: 性别 (xìngbié) | SINGQBIED | (pho mo) | (činar-un ilɣal) | (jinsi) | ꌺꅪ (sse hni) | Korean: 성별 (sŏngbyŏl) | |
Ethnicity | Chinese: 民族 (mínzú) | MINZCUZ | (mi rigs) | (ündüsüten) | (milliti) | ꊿꋅ (co cux) | Korean: 민족 (minjok) | |
Date of birth | Chinese: 出生 (chūshēng) | SENG | (skyes dus) | (törögsen edür) | (tughulghan) | ꒆꄮ (yur te) | Korean: 출생 (ch'ulsaeng) | |
Year-Month-Day | Chinese: 年月日 (nián yuè rì) | NIENZ NYIED HAUH | (lo'i zla, tshe sa, nyin) | (on, sar-a, edür) | (yil, ay, kün) | ꈎ ꆪ ꑍ (kut, help, nyit) | Korean: 년 월 일 (nyŏn, wŏl, il) | |
Domicile | Chinese: 住址 (zhùzhǐ) | DIEGYOUQ | (sdod gnas) | (saɣuɣ-a ɣaǰar) | (adrési) | ꀀꅉ (it dde) | Korean: 주소 (chuso) | |
Resident Identity number | Chinese: 公民身份号码 (gōngmín shēnfèn hàomǎ) | GUNGHMINZ SINHFWN HAUMAJ | (spyi dmangs thob thang ang rtags) | (irgen-ü bey-e ǰin ünemlel-ün nomɛr) | (kimlik nomuri) | ꇬꂱꇭꀧꊫꌐꀕꂷ (go mip gop bo zyp sat sat ma) | Korean: 공민신분증번호 (kongmin sinbunjŭng pŏnho) | |
Issuing authority | Chinese: 签发机关 (qiānfā jīguān) | CIEMFAT GIHGVANH | (mchan sprod las khungs) | (ɣar-un üsüg ǰiruču olɣon ögxügsen beigölɣ-a) | (tarqatqan organ) | ꇭꀧꊫꌐꃑꅉ (gop bo zyp sat fat dde) | Korean: 발급기관 (palgŭp kikwan) | |
Validity | Chinese: 有效期限 (yǒuxiào qīxiàn) | MIZYAUQ GEIZHANH | (nus thon ngus tsod) | (xüčün büxüi xüɣüčaɣ-a) | (küchke ige mudditi) | ꌬꉆꄮꈉ (ssi hxit te kop) | Korean: 유효기한 (yuhyo kihan) |
From October 1, 1999, the PRC State Council approved the establishment of a citizen identification number system, and currently consists of an 18-digit code. This number has a function similar to that of the social security number in the United States. Each citizen has a unique number that remains unchanged for their entire lifetime.
1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 2 | Y | Y | Y | Y | M | M | D | D | 8 | 8 | 8 | X | |
Address code | Date of Birth code | Order code | Checksum |
a1,a2, … ,a18
a1
i-1 | |
W | |
i=2 |
\bmod {11}
S=
18 | |
\sum | |
i=2 |
ai ⋅ Wi
a1=(12-(S \bmod11))\bmod11
// Testalert(calcChecksum('63280119790817003')); // will alert 6
def calculate_checksum(card_id) sum = 0 card_id.reverse.each_char.with_index do |ch, idx| w = (2**(idx + 1)) % 11 sum += ch.to_i * w end (12 - sum % 11) % 11end
puts checksum('34262219840209049') # first 17 digits
puts checksum('63280119790817003')
The identity card is the only acceptable legal document used to obtain resident permits or driving licenses, open bank accounts, register for mobile phone numbers, apply for tertiary education and technical college for mainland Chinese citizens, and is one of the acceptable legal documents used to buy train tickets and pass through security checkpoints within domestic terminals at airports in mainland China. Documentation is also required for marriages, household registrations and legal cases.
Recently, there have been more services that require the display of Resident Identity Cards, such as at Internet cafes and certain stores.[7]
Police are required to inspect identification documents where:
Polyester plastic film, which utilizes an anti-counterfeit laser logo.
Second-generation identity cards contain a non-contact IC chip card, a directional holographic "Great Wall" image, an anti-counterfeiting film made of green multi-layer polyester (PETG) composite material, optical variable optical storage containing the text "中国CHINA" situated on the card, and a microfilm string generating the letters "JMSFZ" (initials for the Pinyin of "Jumin Shenfenzheng"), and a "Great Wall" logo revealed by ultraviolet light.[8]
Unlike the biometric identity cards in EU countries which comply with ICAO standards, the second-generation ID card imposes older technologies similar to MIFARE used on public transportation systems, which, unlike its ICAO-compliant counterparts, lacks the proper encryption of personal data such as BAC control, thus making the information stored on the chip openly accessible to any ID card readers at a near enough distance. Also, because identity cards lack a different numbering scheme from the citizen's identity number for Chinese nationals, there's currently no way to deregister a lost ID card completely even when the loss of the identity card is reported to the police.[9] The above characteristics have made identity cards vulnerable to identification theft.[10]