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Tucson, Arizona | Published: 12.19.2006
NEW DELHI — Lawmakers and women's rights activists raised an alarm Monday over new evidence indicating about 7,000 fewer girls than expected are born each day in India, where women routinely suffer discrimination and parents often abort female fetuses.
The spread of ultrasound technology allowing parents to find out the gender of their unborn children has resulted in the large-scale "disappearance" of girls here. One study released earlier this year estimated that 10 million fewer girls were born here than expected in the past 20 years.
The government must "rise in revolt against the male child mania," said lawmaker Gurudas Dasgupta during a parliamentary debate Monday.
The debate was spurred in part by a report last week from UNICEF, which estimated that 7,000 girls go unborn each day in India, where abortions are legal and a ban on finding out the sex of unborn children and aborting female fetuses is widely flouted.
The result is a skewed gender ratio. Many districts in the country of more than 1 billion people routinely report only 800 females are born for every 1,000 males.
Census shows fewer girls
According to the latest census figures in India, the number of girls per 1,000 boys declined from 945 to 927 between 1991 and 2001.
In China, where there is a similar preference for male offspring, official figures show 117 boys are born for every 100 girls, according to the Xinhua News Agency.
China bans the use of ultrasound or other means to determine the sex of a fetus, but doctors who do so usually face only administrative penalties, not criminal charges.
The situation in India is driving activists to demand that the government declare a "national emergency" and take tough measures to enforce existing laws.
"It is truly a state of emergency and the government has to act," said women's rights activist Ranjana Kumari.
UNICEF's report included dire warnings about the social fallout from the skewed gender ratio: younger girls getting married, girls dropping out of school and dying earlier after being forced to bear children when they are too young. It could also result in more violence against girls and women, UNICEF said.
The government says it is clamping down on doctors who tell parents the sex of their unborn children and abort female fetuses. But in more than a decade, only one such doctor has been convicted, and some senior officials acknowledge tougher action is needed.
Indian families traditionally have preferred boys, partly because of the widespread Hindu religious belief that only a son could perform the last rites when his father dies. Girls are seen as a burden on the family, requiring a huge dowry many families can't afford. They are generally the last to be educated or to get medical treatment.
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