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BBC News Online: World: South Asia


Thursday, 4 May, 2000, 17:10 GMT 18:10 UK

Plea to save girl babies


Women outside Taj Mahal
By Helen Sewell of the BBC science unit

Doctors in India are calling for international help to prevent two million abortions they say are carried out each year because the unborn babies are female.

Terminating a pregnancy purely because of the sex of a child is illegal in India.

But many mothers want boys not girls, and the Indian Medical Association says the law is almost impossible to uphold.
Baby

In some sections of Indian society, having daughters is less acceptable than having sons.

Dr V Parameshvara, a former president of the Indian Medical Association, says intrinsically women have a lower status in India than men.

He says girls can bring economic and social burdens to a family, and rather than bring children into the world to be ill-treated by a patriarchal society, expectant mothers prefer to abort their female babies.

The proportion of females to males in India has been going down since the beginning of the 20th century, with up to 50m fewer women in the population than expected.

In recent years, the ratio has dropped dramatically.

Dr Parameshvara says there has been a long-standing tradition in some circles of killing girl babies just after birth.

But because technology now allows mothers to know the sex of their child before it is born, terminations have become widespread.

Dr Parameshvara claims that a law introduced specifically to prevent abortions because of the sex of the unborn child is being ignored throughout the country.

The Indian Medical Association is urging international colleagues at the World Medical Association to support a campaign against female feticide and female infanticide to rid India of what it calls "this social evil".


Related to this story:
India introduces women's bill (11 Nov 99 | South Asia)
Woman power in India's villages (27 Sep 99 | South Asia)
TB meeting targets women (27 Jul 99 | South Asia)


Internet links: Indian Medical Association | World Medical Association | Articles on abortion and infanticide in India (Harvard Global Reproductive Health Forum) |
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