'A Genocidal Situation'

In India, gender is a life-and-death issue.

BY: Neil Samson Katz
Religion News Service

In a tight alleyway in East Delhi, Radhika Devi, a bashful mother of two girls, and Manjula Thomas, a health worker who cares for pregnant women, rush to an ultrasound clinic. Devi is five months pregnant and desperately wants to know the sex of her unborn child.



"It's better if it's a boy," she says, her hands shaking nervously. "If it's a girl, we will get it aborted."



Radhika, her husband, Radheshyam, and their two daughters share a single room in the congested, mostly lower-class neighborhood of Khichripur. Radheshyam brings home less than $2 a day as a bus driver--barely enough to put food on their table--and they worry about marrying off their two young daughters.



"All girls' parents must pay dowries," Radhika says. "We will take loans and pay it back bit by bit. It might take up to a year's time."



Though dowries are illegal in India, the law is widely ignored and the Devis fear a third daughter will send them over the edge financially. Instead, they hope for a son to one day provide for the family. He would fetch his own dowry upon marriage, take care of his parents as they grow old (India has no social security program) and carry on the family name.



In India's male-dominated society, especially the northwest, this logic is one reason parents abort an estimated half-million female fetuses each year. The practice, called female feticide, has been responsible for at least 10 million female abortions since 1985, according to a controversial study published in January in the Lancet, the British medical journal.



"All kinds of famines, epidemics and wars are nothing compared to this,"


said Punit Bedi, a New Delhi gynecologist. "In some parts of India, one in every five girls is being eliminated at the fetal stage.



"It is a genocidal situation."



Abortion--legal in India since 1971--originally was trumpeted as a way to control the country's rapidly expanding population, now 1.1 billion people, making it the second most populous country in the world, behind China.



"It was understood that all programs (to control the population) were failing because people would not stop having children until they had at least two boys," Bedi said. "Even one was not considered enough in a country where you cannot ensure childhood survival beyond 60 percent."



In 1994, under pressure from a coalition of activists, the Indian government changed course, outlawing the use of ultrasound machines to reveal fetus gender. In 2002, the penalties were stiffened: up to three years in jail and a $230 fine for the first offense and five years imprisonment and $1,160 for the second.



Aborting a child because of its gender has never been legal, but experts said doctors still act with impunity.



"It's a very low-risk, high-profile business," Bedi said. "Not only do the doctors make a lot of money, they are absolutely sure they will not be caught."



In Punjab, a male-dominated state with the most disparate gap between boys and girls in India, only one doctor has been convicted in the past four years of performing a sex-selective abortion, according to V.K. Goyal, a senior Punjabi health official. The convicted doctor's medical license was suspended for five years and he was fined 400 rupees, around $10.



The Lancet study seemed to confirm that laws were not deterring families from sex selection. By analyzing national birth records and fertility histories from a 1998 Indian government survey of 1 million households, the study estimated at least 500,000 female fetuses in 1997 were aborted. Based on that one year, they came to the 10 million figure.



The study also found that families whose first child was a girl were 30 percent less likely overall to produce another girl. And if the mothers had at least a 10th-grade education the gap was twice as large as that for illiterate mothers.



Continued on page 2: Kids are in the hands of God... »

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