The
Need for Action Against Female Feticide in India
By
Dr. Sabu George
Recognizing Violence
Against Women
Violence against women exists in various forms in all societies the world over. However, the recognition that elimination of gender- based violence is central to equality, development and peace, is recent. In India the landmark report on the ‘Status of Women-1975’ did not deal with this issue. Then in the late seventies and eighties, the Indian women’s movement focused on issues of dowry deaths, female feticide, sati, rape and other forms of violence. More recently, international conferences such as the Vienna-1993, Cairo-1994, Copenhagen 1995 and Beijing-1995 explicitly highlighted this problem. The World Health Assembly in 1996 endorsed that violence against women is a public health problem. In 1998, the 50th anniversary of the ‘Declaration of human rights’ was celebrated by the UN with a global campaign for elimination of gender based violence. The objective was to influence public opinion and attitudes, policies, practices and legislation to facilitate a violence-free life for women.
Female feticide is one extreme manifestation of violence against women. Female fetuses are selectively aborted after pre natal sex determination, thus avoiding the birth of girls. In India where female infanticide has existed for centuries, now female feticide has joined the fray and is increasing each day. The reasons for this evil are the introduction and proliferation of pre natal diagnostic test / sex determination clinics and cheaper ultrasound machines that help determine the sex of a child before it is born. Dramatic reduction of birth rates in most of India’s states which contributed toward intensification of son preference in the existing patriarchal society. And one must also not forget the lack of ethics in pockets of the medical profession that result in furthering female feticide. For instance, in Tamilnadu the establishment of numerous ultrasound clinics in semi-urban areas since the mid-nineties is not a widely known fact. Even rural families in the state have begun to commit female feticide to satisfy their preference for sons. In Haryana residents of upper caste hamlets openly admit to the widespread practice of female feticide. Parents tend to be calculative in choosing the sex of the next child and the decision is based on the birth order, sex sequence of previous children and number of sons. Transfer of reproductive technology to India is resulting in reinforcement of patriarchal values as professional medical organizations seem to be indifferent to ethical misconduct. These facts have to be publicized so that awareness can be raised and appropriate action by the state and civil society be initiated.
The
Failure of Activists
Fertility decline has taken place in all economic and social groups in most parts of the country, especially in Tamilnadu. The sharp fall in birth rates from the eighties is one contributory factor for intensification of son preference. Similar developments have been earlier observed in other patriarchal societies such as China, South Korea, Taiwan etc., with the decline in fertility rates. Sex determination methods were being used from 1979 onwards in North India to manipulate sex composition of children to have greater proportion of sons. In 10 years, the sex ratio of pre-school children in Punjab dropped from the already low levels [925 to 874 during 1981-1991]. Sharp declines also occurred in Haryana and Rajasthan, states where female feticide is widespread. In less than a year the 2001 census will reveal the present situation in Punjab and other states. The indication we have from the grassroots level is that there will undoubtedly be an even steeper fall against girls. There are more than one thousand ultrasound clinics in Punjab. And elaborate networks from the village level to the nearest urban ultrasound clinics for referrals exist, where each link gets a commission from the clinics.
In Tamilnadu, the hospital birth data in recent years, reveals an increased masculination in sex ratio at birth [109 boys per 100 boys as opposed to the expected 105]. This is essentially an urban sample. The 2001 census may not see any significant improvement in the sex ratio of surviving children in Tamilnadu. However, we will have no definitive information on whether there is a decline in infanticide due to replacement by female feticide. But one thing is quite certain, the establishment of sex determination clinics is the early warning sign for the impending drop in sex ratios. It takes a decade for the practice to spread and gain widespread social acceptability. And, if a significant number of families in the new millennia start opting for one or more sons with none or fewer daughters, there will be an alarming drop in sex ratios. Our challenge is to reduce the anti-girl attitude of our society before fertility becomes less than two [given current fertility levels, women will have an average of nearly 2 children during the child bearing years].
Significance of the Law
On Pre-Natal Diagnostic Techniques
Recent history of social legislation in India are hardly encouraging as far as their implementation is concerned. However the national law against prenatal diagnostics is a positive step. For fifteen years (1979-1994), when private sex determination clinics were first established and the practice of female feticide flourished in north-western India, the people had received no message questioning the morality of this practice. The enactment of the law enabled the National Human Rights Commission to direct the Medical Council of India to take action against Doctors found abusing prenatal diagnostic techniques. Today, blatant advertisements for fetal sex determination once seen in Bombay trains in the early eighties and in Delhi newspapers in the late eighties and nineties have virtually disappeared. Thanks to laws.
The
first state law enacted in Maharashtra against sex determination was the
Maharashtra Regulation of Use of Prenatal Diagnostic
Techniques Act, 1988. This was the result of vigorous public campaigning in the
state. After this law was effected, the number of SD clinics in Mumbai went down
and the practice of SD also
lessened. This achievement was all due to sustained campaigning and active
monitoring of the Act by the FASDSP [ Forum against sex determination and Sex
Pre- selection]. Unfortunately
this campaign faltered when the FASDSP became non functional and quite a few of
the Mumbai sex determination
clinics resumed operation. However this campaign proved that a lot can be
accomplished by sustained efforts
and eradicating complacency in the state governments. All future campaigns have
to learn from the shortcomings of the abortive Maharshtra campaign.
State Governments should realize the importance and priority of the
present law and not merely treat it with their usual complacency.
Tamilnadu is one such state that has yet to take effective and prompt
action in the implementation of this Act.
The inadequacies of the present law are largely because the Government of India has not been seriously committed to achieving the intent of this Act – The elimination of Sex Determination Testing. Also, due to effective lobbying of Doctors in the early nineties, several positive features of the Maharashtra Act 1988 were watered down in the 1994 National Act. A recent administrative directive from the Family Welfare Ministry excluded a sex determination technique like Erikson's from the purview of the 1944 Act asserting that it applied only to tests conducted on pregnant women. The immediate reaction to this directive was the resumption of newspaper advertisements in North west India again promoting this sophisticated reproductive technology. These very Advertisements had been stopped only a year before when a petition challenging the illegality of these advertisements was filed with the Punjab Human Rights Commission by ‘ Women Against Violence’. The unwillingness of the Government to interpret the legislation to keep it in tune with the inexorable progress in technology is self defeating.
The structures necessary for the implementation of the 1994 law have to be created at the district level. Volunteers have to be actively mobilized to monitor the registration and the functioning of the sex-determination clinics in different districts. Effective alliances with ethical Doctors have to be made from the local levels. Test cases have to be filed against the violators. And also important is that we have to preserve with the media to highlight obstacles in the implementation of the Act. The consciousness of our society has to be raised against this crime. Simultaneously we have to get involved in actions to ensure that the public at large becomes supportive of this campaign. Lobbying with political parties to put this issue on their agenda is imperative. All this is just one step towards efforts to empower women in our society.
The deterioration of women’s
status and the emergence of female feticide is not a unique sociological
phenomenon confined to a particular state. The trend is all over the country;
even in diverse cultural contexts where there has been relative greater gender
equality; such as in the Uttarkhand hills or the Kashmir valley. Our challenge
today is to initiate a vibrant, effective campaign against female feticide. If
we are all committed then only can we reach out to the hearts and minds of our
people. Jammu & Kashmir is important as it is the only state in the country
where there is no legal prohibition against sex determination testing.
The earlier campaigns in the country against sex selective abortions
failed despite the moral correctness of the issue, as they could not create a
sustained social movement against this heinous crime. To stem the increasing
epidemic of female feticide we have to expose the collusion of unethical medical
practitioners with the patriarchal society. The campaign has to oppose the
commodification of women in popular culture and media. Organizations and
individuals with different priorities and ideological beliefs have to rally
together to battle the powerful patriarchal forces operating within the
institutions of the family, government and civil society. A transformation of
our gendered society, is necessary for the elimination of female feticide.