India 'loses 10m female births'

There’s no other form of violence that’s more painful, more abhorrent, more shameful

India ‘loses 10m female births’

Indian cultural tradition favours boys

More than 10m female births in India may have been lost to abortion and sex selection in the past 20 years, according to medical research.

Researchers in India and Canada for the Lancet journal said prenatal selection and selective abortion was causing the loss of 500,000 girls a year.

Their research was based on a national survey of 1.1m households in 1998.

The researchers said the “girl deficit” was more common among educated women but did not vary according to religion.

The unusual gender balance in India has been known about for some time.

In most countries, women slightly outnumber men, but separate research for the year 2001 showed that for every 1,000 male babies born in India, there were just 933 girls.

Ultrasound

The latest research is by Prabhat Jha of St Michael’s Hospital at the University of Toronto, Canada, and Rajesh Kumar of the Postgraduate Institute of Medical Research in Chandigarh, India.

They found that there was an increasing tendency to select boys when previous children had been girls.

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The sex ratio is so skewed in some states, men cannot find brides

In cases where the preceding child was a girl, the ratio of girls to boys in the next birth was 759 to 1,000.
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This fell even further when the two preceding children were both girls. Then the ratio for the third child born was just 719 girls to 1,000 boys.

However, for a child following the birth of a male child, the gender ratio was roughly equal.

Prabhat Jha said conservative estimates in the research suggested half a million girls were being lost each year.

“If this practice has been common for most of the past two decades since access to ultrasound became widespread, then a figure of 10m missing female births would not be unreasonable.”

‘Shameful’

Sex selective abortions have been banned in India for more than a decade.

Experts in India say female foeticide is mostly linked to socio-economic factors.

It is an idea that many say carries over from the time India was a predominantly agrarian society where boys were considered an extra pair of hands on the farm.

The girl child has traditionally been considered inferior and a liability - a bride’s dowry can cripple a poor family financially.

The BBC’s Jill McGivering says the problem is complicated by advances in technology. Ultrasound machines must be officially registered but many are now so light and portable, they are hard to monitor.

Although doctors in India must not tell couples the sex of a foetus, in practice, some just use coded signals instead, our correspondent says.

Last year the well-known religious leader and social activist, Swami Agnivesh, began a campaign across five northern and western states against female foeticide.
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“There’s no other form of violence that’s more painful, more abhorrent, more shameful,” he said.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/4592890.stm,” he said.
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Re: India 'loses 10m female births'

....and then Hindus/Indians have the audacity to dig up lies and misinformation regarding women in Islam. Only example they can sight in their defence are the Taliban. loL!

Re: India 'loses 10m female births'

Horrifying.

Re: India 'loses 10m female births'

Agreed, it's shameful!!

But please do not think Pakistan is any different. Idhi Foundation too mentions that most of the abandoned/dumped infants-are females.

Re: India 'loses 10m female births'

the extrapolation method used to come up with the figure of 10 million is absolutely farcical

i don't know how this even qualifies as professional research

Re: India ‘loses 10m female births’

atleast they are beginning to accept problem exists

The study published by the London-based medical journal comes on the heels of a report last October by the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), which warned that infanticide or abortion was driving India towards a gender imbalance with alarming social consequences.

Afghanistan, China, Nepal, Pakistan and     South Korea face similar problems, the UNFPA said.

http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=2630&ncid=2630&e=148&u=/afp/20060109/wl_asia_afp/healthabortionindiagirls_060109052432

Re: India ‘loses 10m female births’

This means 20 million parents are a$$ höIes.:mad:

Re: India 'loses 10m female births'

^ lol... nice way to look at it. But on a serious note, sub continent needs to educate its people regarding such issues. There is a group in india that performs plays in villiages raising awareness for gender equality and providing entertainment at the same time. Pakistan, Bangladesh , India... all the developing countries need to work on improving the lives and mentality of their citizens. Ameen :)

Re: India 'loses 10m female births'

^ I dont think this is education Gamma. The problem is due to their narrow mentality and to also preserve wealth. If govt impliments strictly the law regarding dowry i think this menace can come down. Besides the over all nature of how a girl is brought up in the society have to be changed. There should be equal rights for both girl and boys in the family wealth. Some religions does not support that.(Christians, i dont know about Muslims). The idea of confining girls to do only certain jobs also have to be stopped.
In summary the whole mindset of the people have to change. Only then these idiotic parents will feel any pain in killing a girl child.

Re: India 'loses 10m female births'

vineshvk,
The key here is education! Whether, its performing plays or enforcing strict regulation of dowry. Every little change will make a difference in the long run.

Re: India 'loses 10m female births'

I saw a report the other day that it was actually the educated in India who were carrying out such acts.

Re: India ‘loses 10m female births’

**Indian mom held for strangling baby girl **

New Delhi - A woman has been arrested for strangling her daughter at a hospital in the Indian capital, news reports said on Wednesday. Pammi Devi was arrested on Tuesday after the police confirmed that she strangled to death her two-day-old daughter on February 3, Hindustan Times newspaper reported. Devi, who has two sons, told the police that after giving birth to a girl she was concerned about her education and other expenses and decided to kill her. The police said the woman had been threatened by her in-laws and husband that he would divorce her if she gave birth to a girl. She first feigned ignorance. The woman came to Delhi’s All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) from her home town in the eastern state of Bihar to get treated for a heart ailment. As she was pregnant, the institute, which is one of India’s premier research hospitals, admitted her and she delivered a healthy baby girl on February 1. On February 3, a nurse on duty noticed the girl was not breathing and had finger marks on the neck, the police said. A post mortem confirmed strangulation. When the police questioned the mother, she first feigned ignorance and then broke down and admitted she had strangled her daughter.

Traditionally girls are seen as burdens in large sections of Indian society, as huge dowries have to be paid for their weddings. There are reports of several cases of female infanticide every year and recently more cases of female foeticide aided by modern technology that can tell the gender of the foetus.
India’s skewed gender ratio indicates the severity of the problem. According to the decennial census, last carried out in 2001, the ratio for 0-6 year-olds fell from 945 females per 1 000 males in 1991 to 927 in 2001, one of the lowest in the world. Recent data from India’s birth and death registration service suggests that this has fallen even further to fewer than 900 females to 1 000 men over the past couple of years. If nature were left to run its course, according to Indian population experts, the ratio of females to males would be 952 to 1 000.

http://www.int.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&click_id=3&art_id=qw1139389921579B253

Re: India ‘loses 10m female births’

Inquiry into Rajasthan foeticides

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/4773389.stm

Re: India ‘loses 10m female births’

this may lower some erections, but its good news…

Re: India 'loses 10m female births'

^
Let's hope that one village can show the rest of India, not to murder so many baby girls.

Re: India 'loses 10m female births'

You don't know how to discuss a point............ Infact SILLY's "Horrifying" is a better response for a change...... than blabbering you did above......

Re: India 'loses 10m female births'

Only silver lining is that there is strong lobby and governement push to stop this non-sense......

Re: India ‘loses 10m female births’

At another clinic that NDTV visited, the ritual was re-enacted, though this time the staff was more cautious because raids have been conducted in ultrasound clinics across Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh recently. But in this region, there has not been a single conviction in the last 13 years, as very often cases are not even filed.

http://www.ndtv.com/morenews/showmorestory.asp?category=National&slug=Female+foeticide+widespread+in+Jhansi&id=87423

Re: India 'loses 10m female births'

Yep, India media is taking issues seriously... this is really good trend for India.. Finally India has found a medium to expose corruption upto some extent.
Nothing is perfect... though now we have a medium to counter the Govt.. that keeps the balance good......

Re: India ‘loses 10m female births’

British Asians coming to India for female foeticide

While efforts are on to check the menace of female foeticide among Indians, British Asians are arriving here to abort female foetuses, raising widespread concerns. Sex determination using ultrasound and abortion of female foetuses is still rampant in the country, admit officials. The problem lies mainly with doctors who do not practice ethics and disclose the sex of the foetus despite the law banning it, they say. “I went to UK six months ago. Indian community leaders in Leiscester told me that women there come to India for determining sex of foetus and getting an abortion in case it is found to be a female,” said Saboo George from the Centre for Development Studies. Indians in other countries are going for sex selective abortions is evident by the fact that sex ratio at birth among the Indian community in New Jeresy is equally bad as that found in Punjab and Haryana, Dr Puneet Bedi, a noted gynaecologist active against female foeticide, said.

Officials in the Health Ministry say “We don’t deny it. It might be happening because medical ethics are not followed in the country while it is not the case in other countries. After all there is nobody with the doctor except patient.” Recently, a report in British newspaper Observer had come up with evidence that British Asian women come to India to abort their baby girls. British law does not allow parents to choose sex of their babies except to avoid certain gender-linked diseases. This forces many people to go abroad. There are three ways of sex selection — pre-natal testing and termination of pregnancy (done using ultrasound), pre-implantation genetic testing of embryo (before embryo is implanted in womb) and sperm sorting. Abortion on the grounds of sex is not allowed under the Abortion Act of 1967 in UK. But sex can be disclosed to patients if they ask during ultrasound. A lot of furore was created in 2002 when UK-based Independent watchdogs “Human Genetics Alert” and “Alternative India” had discovered in 2002 that sex selection clinics in London, Birmingham and Glasgow were advertising in UK Punjabi Press. The ads offered sperm sorting and ultrasound scanning as ways to determine sex. According to the Observer report, pregnant Asian women, who have undergone numerous abortions and are now barred by British National Health Scheme were coming to India. Besides, several clinics in UK have a policy not to disclose sex of the foetus to Asians, as they often abort it if it is a female, George said adding these people choose to come here. A report in Lancet recently had said that over 10 million female foetuses may have been aborted in India in the past two decades. At all India level, 357 cases have been registered against those violating the PNDT. Under the act, MBBS registration of four doctors in Punjab were cancelled, but two of these obtained a stay from High Court, according to government statistics. Generally sex determination using ultrasound takes place in the second trimester of pregnancy (fourth month). Though early abortions are allowed in UK, abortions in the second trimester is permissible only under certain conditions, Bedi said

http://sify.com/news/fullstory.php?id=14129041