where killing baby girls is no big sin

http://www.gendercide.org/case_infanticide.html

**As John-Thor Dahlburg points out, “in rural India, the centuries-old practice of female infanticide can still be considered a wise course of action.” (Dahlburg, “Where killing baby girls ‘is no big sin’,” The Los Angeles Times [in The Toronto Star, February 28, 1994.]) **According to census statistics, "From 972 females for every 1,000 males in 1901 … the gender imbalance has tilted to 929 females per 1,000 males. … In the nearly 300 poor hamlets of the Usilampatti area of Tamil Nadu [state], as many as 196 girls died under suspicious circumstances [in 1993] … Some were fed dry, unhulled rice that punctured their windpipes, or were made to swallow poisonous powdered fertilizer. Others were smothered with a wet towel, strangled or allowed to starve to death." Dahlburg profiles one disturbing case from Tamil Nadu:
Lakshmi already had one daughter, so when she gave birth to a second girl, she killed her. For the three days of her second child’s short life, Lakshmi admits, she refused to nurse her. To silence the infant’s famished cries, the impoverished village woman squeezed the milky sap from an oleander shrub, mixed it with castor oil, and forced the poisonous potion down the newborn’s throat. The baby bled from the nose, then died soon afterward. Female neighbors buried her in a small hole near Lakshmi’s square thatched hut of sunbaked mud. They sympathized with Lakshmi, and in the same circumstances, some would probably have done what she did. For despite the risk of execution by hanging and about 16 months of a much-ballyhooed government scheme to assist families with daughters, in some hamlets of … Tamil Nadu, murdering girls is still sometimes believed to be a wiser course than raising them. “A daughter is always liabilities. How can I bring up a second?” Lakshmi, 28, answered firmly when asked by a visitor how she could have taken her own child’s life eight years ago. “Instead of her suffering the way I do, I thought it was better to get rid of her.” (All quotes from Dahlburg, “Where killing baby girls ‘is no big sin’.”)
**A study of Tamil Nadu by the Community Service Guild of Madras similarly found that “female infanticide is rampant” in the state, though only among Hindu (rather than Muslim or Christian) families. “Of the 1,250 families covered by the study, 740 had only one girl child and 249 agreed directly that they had done away with the unwanted girl child. More than 213 of the families had more than one male child whereas half the respondents had only one daughter.” (Malavika Karlekar, “The girl child in India: does she have any rights?,” Canadian Woman Studies, March 1995.) **
The bias against females in India is related to the fact that “Sons are called upon to provide the income; they are the ones who do most of the work in the fields. In this way sons are looked to as a type of insurance. With this perspective, it becomes clearer that the high value given to males decreases the value given to females.” (Marina Porras, “Female Infanticide and Foeticide”.) The problem is also intimately tied to the institution of dowry, in which the family of a prospective bride must pay enormous sums of money to the family in which the woman will live after marriage. Though formally outlawed, the institution is still pervasive. “The combination of dowry and wedding expenses usually add up to more than a million rupees ([US] \$35,000). In India the average civil servant earns about 100,000 rupees ($3,500) a year. Given these figures combined with the low status of women, it seems not so illogical that the poorer Indian families would want only male children.” (Porras, “Female Infanticide and Foeticide”.) Murders of women whose families are deemed to have paid insufficient dowry have become increasingly common, and receive separate case-study treatment on this site.
India is also the heartland of sex-selective abortion. Amniocentesis was introduced in 1974 “to ascertain birth defects in a sample population,” but “was quickly appropriated by medical entrepreneurs. A spate of sex-selective abortions followed.” (Karlekar, “The girl child in India.”) Karlekar points out that “those women who undergo sex determination tests and abort on knowing that the foetus is female are actively taking a decision against equality and the right to life for girls. In many cases, of course, the women are not independent agents but merely victims of a dominant family ideology based on preference for male children.”
John Thor-Dahlburg notes that “In Jaipur, capital of the western state of Rajasthan, prenatal sex determination tests result in an estimated 3,500 abortions of female fetuses annually,” according to a medical-college study. (Dahlburg, “Where killing baby girls ‘is no big sin’.”) Most strikingly, according to UNICEF, “A report from Bombay in 1984 on abortions after prenatal sex determination stated that 7,999 out of 8,000 of the aborted fetuses were females. Sex determination has become a lucrative business.” (Zeng Yi et al., “Causes and Implications of the Recent Increase in the Reported Sex Ratio at Birth in China,” Population and Development Review, 19: 2 [June 1993], p. 297.) **
Deficits in nutrition and health-care also overwhelmingly target female children. Karlekar cites research
indicat[ing] a definite bias in feeding boys milk and milk products and eggs … In Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh [states], it is usual for girls and women to eat less than men and boys and to have their meal after the men and boys had finished eating. Greater mobility outside the home provides boys with the opportunity to eat sweets and fruit from saved-up pocket money or from money given to buy articles for food consumption. In case of illness, it is usually boys who have preference in health care. … More is spent on clothing for boys than for girls,] which also affects morbidity. (Karlekar, “The girl child in India.”)
Sunita Kishor reports “another disturbing finding,” namely “that, despite the increased ability to command essential food and medical resources associated with development, female children [in India] do not improve their survival chances relative to male children with gains in development. Relatively high levels of agricultural development decrease the life chances of females while leaving males’ life chances unaffected; urbanization increases the life chances of males more than females. … Clearly, gender-based discrimination in the allocation of resources persists and even increases, even when availability of resources is not a constraint.”
(Kishor, “‘May God Give Sons to All’: Gender and Child Mortality in India,” American Sociological Review, 58: 2 [April 1993], p. 262.) **

http://www.hsph.harvard.edu/Organizations/healthnet/SAsia/suchana/0225/george.html

Female Infanticide in Tamil Nadu, India :From Recognition Back to Denial?

My first encounter with the practice of female infanticide was accidental. I had never even dreamt of its existence when I was planning a four-year prospective nutrition research project in 12 villages in north Tamil Nadu on improving the growth of children of pre-school age. Every two to three months a case was reported among the 13,000 study population. When I brought these to the attention of social scientists and demographers, most refused to take my observations seriously.

The most surprising aspect about female infanticide is that the traditional methods of killing are remarkably similar whether in north, central or south Tamil Nadu. For instance, paddy (rice with its husk) soaked in milk or the poisonous sap of the calotropis plant are used. How could villagers spread over 700 kilometres have possessed the same knowledge in the absence of major migration over these distances? It is unlikely to have been coincidental. Probably, the knowledge has been handed down over several generations.

In rural Tamil Nadu I have seen many parents who do not even try to hide their contempt for girls of higher birth orders, naming them Venda (don’t want) or Podum Pennu (enough of daughters).

One organisation which has reported cases of female infanticide to the police subsequently found that parents were reporting the deaths of female infants from natural causes, or that they had been stillborn. And in fact, there has been an increase in the reported number of female infant deaths from natural causes. I have personally come across misreporting of female infanticides as stillbirths in the 12 North Arcot villages where I lived and worked for four years. In Salem district, after the police took action against female infanticide two years ago, there were instances where parents misreported that a male infant had been born and died when in fact it was a female infant, in an attempt to hide the infanticide.

Some parents have succeeded in having death certificates falsified by bribing doctors. Public health officials in Salem district have personally acknowledged to me that they do not formally report female infant deaths, owing to community pressure on local health workers.

[This message has been edited by cool down (edited February 25, 2002).]

Cool Down.. I see that your point is that this practice is embedded in Indian Culture. To validate your thesis, could you give some data on Pakistan (ratio of male-female) for comparative purposes? Thanks.

Age structure: 0-14 years: 40.47% (male 30,131,400; female 28,391,891)

15-64 years: 55.42% (male 40,977,543; female 39,164,663)

65 years and over: 4.11% (male 2,918,872; female 3,032,270) (2001 est.)

FOR INDIA

Age structure: 0-14 years: 33.12% (male 175,630,537; female 165,540,672)

15-64 years: 62.2% (male 331,790,850; female 308,902,864)

65 years and over: 4.68% (male 24,439,022; female 23,687,200) (2001 est.)

"Instead of her suffering the way I do, I thought it was better to get rid of her."

that is the worst excuse Ive ever heard!


  • If truth is knowledge, knowledge is power, and power corrupts, then are all the liars in the world really the good guys?...*

Ny Ahmedie

Cool down is just a messenger.The contributors of the articles are among from diferent countries including INDIA.There fore

1/Dont shoot the messenger

2/ this problem or social evil is not a hypothesis any more but a fact that doesnt need to be proven every time it is discussed.

there are close to 20 million foeticides of female gender in last 2-3 yrs

5 lakhs burn cases i last 2-3 yrs

http://www3.pak.org/gupshup/smilies/mad2.gif

One reason why there are more than usual populatrion of prostitutes in India almost 40 millions because women are abandoned neglected & disowned who end up in big city brothels.I know there is Hira Mandi in Lahore but i am talking about almost in every small town almosdt like here in usa


“If the only prayer you said in your whole life was, ‘thank you,’ that would suffice.”

Mr. ny hamadi.

it is better for you to read articles before reply. In article one author(who is american) says, "though only among Hindu (rather than Muslim or Christian) families". later he says, "249 agreed directly that they had done away with the unwanted girl child"

http://www.dalitstan.org/books/gowh/gowh1.html

Ms Sita Agarwal has pointed out “VEDIC FEMALE INFANTICIDE”.

**Genocide of Women in Hinduism **
by
Sita Agarwal
The Vedas prescribe an intense hatred for women, and female children were considered highly undesirable in the nomadic Aryan patriarchal view. Indeed, so deep-rooted was the desire for male children that the Vedas prescribe numerous prayers for male offspring :

Atharva Veda.6.2.3 : **" Let a female child be born somewhere else; here, let a male child be born." **
Ath.Ved.VI.2.3 ] cf. Peri ]

The following verse, from the sacred' Vedas of the noble’ faith of Hinduism, allows the practice, and takes it for granted as a normal practice in Vedic religion :

Taittirya Samhita VI.5.10.3 : " Hence they Aryans ] reject a female child when born, and take up a male."
< Sans. " Tasmat striyam jatam parasyanti ut pumamsam haranti " >

Taitt.Samh.VI.5.10.3 ] Muir I 26 ]

These are the wonderful' truths about the most spiritual’ religion of Hinduism. The inhuman Hindu female infanticide is not due to any `corruption’, but is fully sanctioned by the core of Hindu religious scriptures - the Vedas.

The manner in which the bigoted Brahmins prescribed death for female infants is especially heart-rending. Often, the parents would be forced to cut up the child and then feed the flesh to animals. Othertimes, the child would be smothered by the midwife. **Vivekananda himself refers to a painting showing a Hindu woman throwing her children into the Ganges crocodiles which was widely distributed in the West. The brave' Rajputs would often have to throw up the baby girl, and chop her up with uns heathed swords as she fell.** Rajputs considered it brave to kill their own female children ! No wonder Sanskrit, the language of the learned’ Brahmanas, has not even a single word for chivalry or virtue !

Nor has it stopped here. The Brahmins have perverted modern technology to develop a new variety of female infanticide, namely female foeticide, which is now spreading rapidly in Brahmin-Occupied India. In Tamil Nadu it is now resorted to, in addition to the time-tested methods of starvation, burial of live children and suffocation Tam ]. The latter methods appear natural and thus allow the mother to circumvent the law, whilst the more new-fangled hi-tech methods are technically illegal. These laws on paper are the result of Ambedkar’s law-making : the Brahmins opposed any legislation against female infanticide.

In the neo-Brahminist Government of India, the genocide of women continues at full pace. Fully one-tenth of each generation of females is exterminated due to Hindu laws.

NOTE: females are not allowed to read holy texts of hindus.

[This message has been edited by cool down (edited February 27, 2002).]

here are some comments of eye witnesses.

http://www.the-week.com/99jan24/life2.htm

As soon as the baby girl was born, my mother-in-law kicked it with her toe and said, ‘Who wants this?’ She wrapped it in a wet towel and left it on the floor. My husband’s sister, weak after the delivery, just wept. It died within a few hours."

The lucky ones
Nalampalli nurse Sarojini with Sudha and Pushpalatha, the two babies she helped save (left). A woman with her just delivered daughters in the Marthanahalli Health Centre. (right)

Palaniamma from Nalampalli was describing the birth and death of her sister-in-law’s third daughter: the unnamed, unacknowledged girl child who was killed by her own grandmother. An infant whose death had been ordered by her own father because he wanted a son.

Palaniamma’s own third daughter… her other sister-in-law’s fourth daughter… her neighbour’s second daughter. The list was awesome, and the methods of killing increasingly cruel. At least 3,000 infants have been killed in Dharmapuri district of Tamil Nadu in the last three years.

Kallar women in the villages of Usilampatti confessed to having killed their daughters by lacing the milk with yerakkam paal (a poisonous plant sap) or pesticide. Some slit the tender throats of their babies by giving them husks of paddy to swallow. It was horrible.

If the killing was quick and relatively painless then, it is prolonged and torturous now. Their bodies are deliberately weakened and dehydrated by their own parents.

Inducing pneumonia is the modern method. The infant is wrapped in a wet towel or dipped in cold water as soon as it is born or when it comes back home from hospital. If, after a couple of hours, it is still alive the child is taken to a doctor who diagnoses pneumonia and prescribes medicine which the parents promptly throw away. When the child finally dies, the parents have a medical certificate to prove pneumonia. Sometimes the infant is fed a drop of alcohol to create diarrohea. Another certifiable “disease”.

Muniamma and Krishnan are agricultural labourers eking out a living in Kolasinahalli. A case of female infanticide has been registered against them by the panchayat vice-president and the president of the local Nehru Yuvak Kendra. The couple, who are now out on bail, have two daughters. Muniamma’s third daughter died suspiciously soon after birth. A post-mortem examination of the body which was exhumed a couple of weeks ago revealed that the baby had been given a sedative. A benign but detectable way of killing.

Avoiding detection is now as important as the killing itself. The infants are sometimes cremated, but that arouses suspicion because the usual practice is burial.

“In Devarsampettai, the Oor Gounder, who is the most important man in the village, killed his female infant,” a village health nurse told this correspondent. “Infanticide cuts across all castes and communities and knows no economic barriers.”

A shocking revelation… but one which is authenticiated by detailed data collected from a survey of rural households in Tamil Nadu. Sheela Rani Chunkath, the dynamic bureaucrat who has launched an aggressive campaign to tackle the problem, says that female infanticide is a post-independence phenomenon brought about by uneven economic development, escalating poverty and high dowry demands.

“When we tell them not to kill, they say, ‘Who are you to askÑit’s our child’,” said Dr Nalini, the medical officer attached to Danida, which is funding the health care project in this area. “If we say killing a small child is murder, they just laugh.”

now I will like to know the comments of hindu guppies in this forum. in modern time would they allow females to read their holy texts? and what will the reaction of females when they will read propagand against them in barhamin texts??

http://www3.pak.org/gupshup/smilies/wink.gif

http://www3.pak.org/gupshup/smilies/wink.gif

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http://www3.pak.org/gupshup/smilies/wink.gif

The topic reminds me of a poem by Nilambri Ghai

Why do you hide behind your shadow
Look, the world has no veil around it,
sometimes, it can be beautiful!
It's close to your body, it wants to touch you,
your isolation,
your widow nights,
your heavy smile,
your half-open lips,
your dry hands,
your words.
It wants to kiss them.
Why don't your eyes rise to look?
Are they usused
to this?
It it like an insult
to be without a veil?

Do you exist from day to day
in the hope that something will change,
that you'll be born again as a mother
in a home where there might be a shortage of girls?
Do you have only a veil to give to your daughter?
The same veil,
so bitter, and yet, so much like you, your own?

In the silence of the night,
when you crushed the little neck
with that veil,
did it seem simple to end it all?
Just like that, so simple,
with such little effort of your hands?
Did you feel numb once it was all over?
The tiny life? the silent cry?
How did you never let it reach your ears?
Did you wrap it, never to open it?
in your veil?

"My daughter," you said, "yes, it happened two years ago.
It was God's will...She died quietly.
It had to be done...
There were too many of us around...".

http://www3.pak.org/gupshup/smilies/teary3.gif

http://www3.pak.org/gupshup/smilies/teary3.gif

http://www3.pak.org/gupshup/smilies/teary3.gif

below are some facts about “dais” who are taking money to kill baby girls.
http://www.warroom.com/femalinfancide.htm

“Lakshmi gave birth to five daughters, only two survive. The other three are all victims of infanticide, killed at birth over the last four years.** The method they employed was to mix sleeping tablets in milk and feed it to the baby.** The last girl child was killed some time in October 1997. Even as Lakshmi cried while she spoke her desire to have a son remained strong. The reason for killing was purely ‘financial.’ Since Lakshmi and Raja* live in a small village of marginal farmers. They own a little over half an acre of dry land on which they cultivate groundnut in order to supplement their income, they work as agricultural labourers. Both are uneducated like most of the adults in the village.” – Female Infanticide Vol XIII

** The stark reality is that India today tops the list in illegal abortions and female infanticide in the world.** A CMJI report quoting UNICEF says, 40-50 million girls have gone ‘missing’ in India in 1990. They are termed as missing as they were either murdered at the time of their birth or within few hours of birth.

Women who assist in childbirth, snuff out newborn females.

In fact the very women who assist in the birth of a child are the ones who are paid to finish off unwanted female babies.** On payment of a fee that can range between Rs. 60-150, these dais kill the female babies the moment they are born.**

The methods adopted to kill newborns are many. In south Indian states like Tamil Nadu, children are either fed the milk of poisonous plants or covered with a wet towel so that they die later of complications from cold.

In Bihar, holding the baby from the waist and shaking it back and forth snaps the spinal chord. Sometimes a child is stuffed in a clay pot. Babies are also fed with salt to increase their blood pressure, death follows in a few minutes. Grains of paddy husk are also fed to slit the tender gullet.

According to a report in Nexus, in a certain block in Katihar district, 35 dais accepted having killed three to four babies a month, making the total number of female babies who are killed approximately 560 per month. Ten dais in the Sitamarhi districts claim to have killed 1-2 babies a month. In this state alone there are approximately five lakhs dais and the number of female babies killed can just be imagined.

These dais are the only link between the family and the mother and a great amount of pressure is put on the dai to kill the baby if the baby is a female.

Female infanticide is leading to a serious imbalance in the sex ratio in the country

Female infanticide is leading to a serious imbalance in the sex ration in the country. According to the 1991 statistics for out of every 1,000 males there are only 929 girls and by 2001 there will be only 920 women for 1,000 males. In stark contrast, countries like Western Europe and US the sex ratio is 1,064 and 1,054 respectively. (Sex ratio patterns in the Indian population; Satish Agnihotri)

Even in the present ‘modern’ age there are 4 villages out of every 10 districts in Punjab, where the sex ratio is for every 1000 boys there are only 800 girls. Even the neighboring state of Haryana is not far behind where are 4 districts that have highly disproportionate sex ratio.

[This message has been edited by cool down (edited March 01, 2002).]

<<< How did you never let it reach your ears?
Did you wrap it, never to open it?>>>>>>

they believe to kill a baby girl of some days, or to kill her before birth is not a sin.

lump in my throat wala icon

http://www3.pak.org/gupshup/smilies/teary3.gif


  • If truth is knowledge, knowledge is power, and power corrupts, then are
    all the liars in the world really the good guys?..*

the knowledge has been handed down over several generations.

<<< a tradition of india>>>>

the following article is relevant to this subeject

International women’s day

By Fateh M. Chaudhri

Even though it was almost 150 years ago (March 8, 1857), that some women workers in the garment and textile industries staged an organized protest in New York to draw attention to their poor pay and pathetic working conditions, very little improvement has actually occurred in their lives.

The United Nations international conferences dealing with women’s problems have also yielded few effective action programmes that the participating governments were supposed to implement to ameliorate the women’s conditions in any significant manner.

Under these circumstances, should we continue to designate a particular day as the women’s day? To this question my answer as a development economist is ‘yes,’ but let me hasten to add that the important point is not to designate a day on women’s development issue but to think about the subject-matter seriously and address the same vigorously.

In South Asia colossal gender insensitivity is a fact of life. Even five years after the Fourth World Conference on Women in Beijing, women are miles behind men in every walk of life: the job market, government offices, educational institutions and business enterprises.

The grim picture of women’s conditions is dotted with horrific facts: Pakistan and India have one of the most distorted sex ratios in the world - there are only 900 females for every one thousand males in Pakistan and 930 in India; adult female literacy rates as a percentage of males are 48 and 58; female primary enrolment as a percentage of male are 55 and 66 in Pakistan and India respectively.

More importantly, the ranking of the gender empowerment measure developed by the UNDP in 1997 showed Pakistan at the second lowest out of 102 countries and India at 95th position in the index. The majority of South Asian women work in the informal sector with pathetic pay scales or as unpaid family helpers.

The latest calculations reported in the Mahbubul Haq Human Development Centre’s report on Human Development in South Asia 2000, show that the Gender related development Index (GDI) in South Asia (0.51) was very low by world standards and the same in Pakistan (0.47) was lower than the South Asian average.

The Gender Empowerment Measure (GEM) which highlights the extent to which women are involved in political and economic activities, showed an average of 0.24 for South Asia and a meagre 0.18 for Pakistan.

The same was true with respect to the Human Development Index (HDI) that showed South Asian Index at 0.64 and Pakistan’s at 0.51. An important point to note is that since the GDI is lower than the HDI, women have both lower overall achievement in Human Development and even lower achievement than men.

The sad fact is that women’s contribution to household maintenance, the informal sector markets, where 65% to 95% of economically active women are involved, and family care are not even included in systems of national accounts. Even in the agricultural sector women have a heavy work load in such areas as crops farming, livestock husbandry and off-farm activities but much of their work goes unrecognized and unappreciated. It is not surprising then that women’s basic human rights are denied and inequality is maintained at a wide arrange of their involvement. Why is this so?

One basic reason is that the legal terrain is particularly rough for women in South Asia. Even though there are constitutional guarantees for women’s legal equality, the existing laws and customs defy such equality in practice and relegate women’s right to sham. Discrimination has become “normal” in this part of the world.

Women in South Asia generally and in Pakistan particularly face heavy barriers in their access to health services. That is why there are 480 deaths per 100,000 live births in South Asia compared with 13 in industrialized countries. AT the same time most of them suffer from chronic energy deficiency because they do not receive even the minimum daily requirements of 2250 calories.

In the education sector, the average rate of female literacy in South Asia rose from 17 to 37 per cent whereas the same shot up from 32 to 63 per cent in the developing countries during 1970-1997. A large number of barriers to girls education such as the shortage of teachers, single-sex schools, travel distance to schools are well known in this part of the world. What is generally not recognized is the unpleasant fact that these barriers have become virtually insurmountable hurdles to higher, vocational and technical education.

The tragic fact is that we have yet to recognize the importance of female education. The internationally reputed experts have stated that there is no greater catalyst for social and economic progress than female education. Let me quote a few well researched facts:

  • The contribution to economic growth by education and skills ie the human capital in South Asia (76 per cent) is overwhelmingly large when compared with the contribution made by physical capital consisting of machines, buildings and economic infrastructure (15 per cent) and that made by natural resource capital (9 per cent).

  • The social rates of return (RR) to education in Asia are large: primary, 20 per cent; secondary, 13 per cent and higher education, 12 per cent.

  • The doubling of female secondary education would reduce the infant mortality rate from 84 to 31 per cent per thousand or about 64 per cent. In contrast, the doubling of per capita income would reduce it only by 6 per cent and the doubling of the number of doctors would decrease it by 5 per cent.

  • Education dramatically enhances women’s confidence. In a survey in Bangladesh the women were asked whether they would go to a political meeting alone and the answers were in the following order: with no education, 4 per cent; with primary education, 7 per cent; with secondary education, 18 per cent and college education, 46 per cent.

  • Throughout South Asia, there is significant impact of women’s schooling on the age at marriage, the desired family size and awareness of family planning and human welfare.

A number of other research findings on the importance of education for women could have been enumerated, but the above should suffice to convince concerned citizens and policy makers that this topic should have been on the top of our national priorities list.

Unfortunately this was not done with the result that we have very little to our credit on the ground. The first Five-Year Plan (1955-60) stated that we would achieve “free and compulsory education” by 1995. The “score-card” shows a total failure - 37 per cent of the boys and 55 per cent of the girls in the primary school age population are out of schools. More than 50 per cent of the children drop out of schools before completing the 5th grade.

In our country, at the primary level only 25 per cent of teachers are female while the proportion in developing countries is 51 per cent. Since independence, we have increased the number of primary schools eighteen-fold and multiplied enrolment sixteen times but these gains were defeated by the rising population that increased from 33 million to around 140 million.

It is hoped that some concrete and meaningful measures would be taken now to realize the importance of female education and skill development.

http://www.dawn.com/2002/03/08/op.htm#1

Rvizk, this article trashes all the female infanticide hues and cries (I am not saying that it does not exist in India), but perhaps Cool-Down should explain whatever happened to females in Pakistan? The stats in your article are really worrisome.

the article doesn’t say any thing about female infanticide.

do you know what means infanticide???

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Source: UNDP Report
Gender Related Development Rank
India: 105
Pakistan: 117

Female Life Expectancy at Birth
India: 63.3 Years
Pakistan: 59.5 Years

Adult Female Literacy Rate
India: 44.5%
Pakistan: 30%

Combined Female Enrollment Ratio:
India: 49%
Pakistan: 28%

Estimated Female Earned Income:
India: 1,195 (PPP US$)
Pakistan: 826 (PPP US$)

Now here comes the final kick!

** Changes in Sex Ratio in the last 15 years **

Source: CIA Reports
Sex Ratio at birth:
India: 1.05 male(s)/female
Pakistan: 1.05 male(s)/female

Sex Ratio under 15 years:

India: 1.06 male(s)/female
Pakistan: 1.06 male(s)/female

In the last 15 years, there is no difference between Pakistani killing and Indian killing!