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Women Harassed in “Incredible India”: Women’s genocide-Persistent ogling, heckling by Indian men.
Everyone must read it completely before opening their mouths wide, and for the love of humanity..
Many countries of the world discriminate against women. Several countries of the world keep women as prizes. Some countries of the world offer women the dignity and the equality that they deserve. India is unique in treating women in a manner that is worse than animals. Unobserved by the media and hidden by the panaglossian gloss of Bollywood, the Indian treatment of infants, baby girls, and women in general is the worst on the planet. The NGOs in India are not struggling for equal rights of the women. The struggle in India is more basic than that. the female is struggling in India “for the right to live“. All this hidden under the facade of “Incredible India” to lure Western women who has can be lured to be raped or jailed and institutionalized.
-Pornywood’s (Bollywood) gyrating pelvics cannot hide the truth and the incarceration of 50 million “white widows” in temples who are sold as “prostitutes. (see Deepak Mehta’s “Water” {http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_(2005_film)}. God Bless Deepak Mehta. She should be anointed as a saint and given the Nobel Peace Prize.
-Bharat (India) is fast becoming the land of the boys. The infanticide of girls is changing the male female ratio and many males are without wives. Despitethe shortage of women the infanticide goes on. This is one of the many dozen stories that are available about the brutal practice of girl infanticide.
-“There is a little-known battle for survival going in some parts of the world. Those at risk are baby girls, and the casualties are in the millions each year. The weapons being used against them are prenatal sex selection, abortion and female infanticide - the systematic killing of girls soon after they are born.”
The numbers are mind boggling. The shrill shriek of the female is muffled in song and dance and the babies are sacrificed on the alter of geopolical expediency. Millions killed, millions forced into prostitution, and millions incarcerated in religious jails called “temples”.
The imbalances are also giving rise to a commercial sex trade; the 2005 report states that up to 800,000 people being trafficked across borders each year, and as many as 80 percent are women and girls, most of whom are exploited.
Sonograms are routinely used to determine the gender of the fetus and if it is a girl, the fetus is aborted. This practice has changed the gender ratio in most Indian states. From birth to death, the life of the female gender is a nightmare. Fetuses are aborted, female infant babies are murdered right after birth, and women spend a life of servitude.
-The issue of girl infanticide, or the murder of children because they are female, is of growing concern in contemporary society worldwide. This violation of a girl’s basic right to life requires urgent attention and action. The following report, drafted by members of the Working Group on the Girl Child (part of theNGO Committee on the Status of Women in Geneva), focuses on two main areas: the right to be born (female foeticide) and the right to live (girl infanticide)
f a Indian husband dies, the widow is supposed to be burnt on the funeral pyre. Those who try to hide this fact as a chapter out of the past should visit the thousands of emergency centers around India which report hundreds and thousands of women with burn injuries. Widows who survive are incarcerated in temples and abused as prostitutes. According to the Indian civil rights activists more than 50 million widows spend their life in temples (jails) which sell them off as prostitutes.
Abortion is a lucrative business that many doctors do not want to see curtailed. “Abortions are a low-risk, high-profit business. As a specialist in fetal medicine, I can tell you that no pregnant woman would suffer if the ultrasound test were banned,” says Puneet Bedi, a gynecologist at Apollo Hospitals in New Delhi. “Right now, it is used to save 1 out of 20,000 fetuses and kill 20 out of every 100 because [it reveals that the baby] is the wrong gender.”
All this hidden under the soft **** of Bollywood.
Principal causes for female foeticide and girl infanticide
- Traditions: social pressure stronger than law girls considered as a useless economic burden misunderstanding of the importance of the committed crime non respect of women’s rights exclusion of women from their societies if traditions are not followed superstition, religious beliefs
- Illiteracy:
ignorance of the human body and the way it functions ignorance of the laws in force
- Poverty Principal consequences of female foeticide and girl infanticide
For women: high risk of death high risk of disease / malformation mental traumatism
GENDER MURDER IN INDIA:-10 million baby girls killed before and after birth
According to a recent United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) State of the World Population Report, these practices, combined with neglect, have resulted in at least 50 million “missing” girls in India
INDIA 1990: 25 million more males than females in India.
INDIA 2001: The male female gender gap had risen to 35 million.
INDIA Now 50 million. 51 districts in India now have more male babies born compared to female, according to UNICEF. “In 80 per cent of districts in India, the situation is getting worse“.
In its global campaign to attract foreign tourists, India’s “Incredible India” ads feature a young woman enjoying her morning yoga session on a secluded beach.
In reality, what female tourists experience too often is this: persistent ogling and heckling by Indian men.
“At times I find it hard traveling around as a woman in Delhi. I’ve been groped twice in public,” said Amanda Burrell, 36, a blue-eyed, blond-haired documentary filmmaker from England on vacation in India. “I think Indian women have it much worse.”
If the Indian male ever had a reputation for being suave and sophisticated, that image has hit rock bottom. In recent weeks a spate of attacks against women and a new study showing rape as the fastest-growing crime in New Delhi are painting a less flattering picture.
In India, the fact that men are being held under such heightened scrutiny is a sign of changing social rules between men and women as the country modernizes.
While more and more Indian women move into the high-tech workforce or rise to key government posts in the new India, some analysts say many women appear to be losing the battle to overcome centuries-old cultural attitudes that tend to devalue the role of women and keep them dependent on men.
Many of India’s social values have not kept pace with the development of its modern cities,” said Shaibal Gupta, a social analyst for the Asian Development Research Institute, a nongovernmental agency based in the northeastern Indian state of Bihar.
India’s predominantly Hindu culture is skewed in favor of boys and men, say some social experts. In India’s deep-rooted system of dowry, a bride’s family pays the groom for marrying her - a custom that has been outlawed but only loosely enforced.
Most Indian men don’t have opportunities for intimate contact with women until their mid-20s,” Gupta said. “For some of them, their only exposure to women in a sexual context has been in the virtual realms of Bollywood and Internet **** sites.”
For many women in India, the result can be terrifying.
In an incident that rattled the country, dozens of young men taunted and groped two girls as they left a New Year’s Eve party at a popular five-star hotel in Mumbai, formerly known as Bombay. An Indian newspaper photographer called the police and recorded the melee in a shocking series of photos that ran on the front page of almost every major newspaper in India, launching a flurry of editorials.
In a televised interview, the outraged chief of India’s ministry for women and child development called for the death penalty for those convicted of rape.
There have been several high-profile assaults recently against foreign women in India. A British freelance journalist allegedly was raped by the owner of a guesthouse where she was staying in northern India. A 28-year-old American tourist was groped by a Hindu priest while visiting a temple in the northwestern Indian state of Rajasthan.
Several Western embassies have issued warnings on the dangers women often face in India.
“I get stared at, and sometimes men approach me and say things. But I’ve lived in India long enough that I’ve almost stopped paying attention to it,” said Lauren Olsen, 16, a student at an American school in Delhi.
Abortion, Female Infanticide, Foeticide, Son preference in India. India’s female to male ratio is 100 males to 93 females compared to a world average of 100 males to 105 females.
The main reason for the widespread female foeticide and the continuing prevalence of female infanticide in parts of India was the dowry system, which although long prohibited by law, continues to play a significant role in Indian society. Dowries and wedding expenses regularly run to more than a million rupees ($35,000) in a country where the average civil servant earns about 100,000 rupees ($3,500) a year. Added to this the low status of women in rural India, where they perform the menial tasks of the family such as carrying water and firewood and seeing to feeding the animals, and it is clear where the roots of the discrimination spring.
The situation is even worse regarding educating these children. India, which is estimated to have some 432 million illiterate people, must give top priority to compulsory elementary education for social and economic growth to occur. 64 percent of Indian men are literate, but fewer than two out of five women can read and write. About 41 percent of Indian girls under the age of 14 do not attend school, said the report.
http://www.wunrn.com/news/2007/03_07/03_12_07/031707_female.pdf
According to a recent United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) State of the World Population Report, these practices, combined with neglect, have resulted in at least 50 million “missing” girls in India
Bharat is fast becoming the land of the boys. The infanticide of girls is changing the male female ratio and many males are without wives. Despitethe shortage of women the infanticide goes on. This is one of the many dozen stories that are available about the brutla practice of girl infanticide
“There is a little-known battle for survival going in some parts of the world. Those at risk are baby girls, and the casualties are in the millions each year. The weapons being used against them are prenatal sex selection, abortion and female infanticide - the systematic killing of girls soon after they are born.”
The imbalances are also giving rise to a commercial sex trade; the 2005 report states that up to 800,000 people being trafficked across borders each year, and as many as 80 percent are women and girls, most of whom are exploited.
According to a recent report by the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) up to 50 million girls and women are missing from India’ s population as a result of systematic gender discrimination in India. In most countries in the world, there are approximately 105 female births for every 100 males.
In India, there are less than 93 women for every 100 men in the population. The accepted reason for such a disparity is the practice of female infanticide in India, prompted by the existence of a dowry system which requires the family to pay out a great deal of money when a female child is married. For a poor family, the birth of a girl child can signal the beginning of financial ruin and extreme hardship.
However this anti-female bias is by no means limited to poor families. Much of the discrimination is to do with cultural beliefs and social norms. These norms themselves must be challenged if this practice is to stop.
Diagnostic teams with ultrasound scanners which detect the sex of a child advertise with catchlines such as spend 600 rupees now and save 50,000 rupees later.
The implication is that by avoiding a girl, a family will avoid paying a large dowry on the marriage of her daughter. According to UNICEF, the problem is getting worse as scientific methods of detecting the sex of a baby and of performing abortions are improving.
These methods are becoming increasing available in rural areas of India, fuelling fears that the trend towards the abortion of female foetuses is on the increase from the February 09, 2005 edition More than a million girls are killed at birth or aborted
The vanishing girls of India
The consequence of female infanticide and, more recently, abortion is India’s awkwardly skewed gender ratio, among the most imbalanced in the world. The ratio among children up to the age of 6 was 962 girls per 1,000 boys in 1981, but 20 years later the inequity was actually worse: 927 girls per 1,000 boys.
Infanticide is illegal in India (though never prosecuted), and laws are also in place to stop sex- selective abortions. But in some places, national rules don’t hold enough sway to overcome local religious and social customs - which remain biased in favor of sons over daughters.
“Factors like dowry, imbalance in the employment sector whereby the male is seen as breadwinner, and societal pressure to abort female fetuses conspire to increase the antigirl bias,” says Ajay K. Tripathi of the Advanced Studies in Public Health Programme, of the Institute of Health Systems in Hyderabad. Government and the medical profession, he says, need to put more resources - and more political will - into strengthening and enforcing the laws.
A case in point is legislation - introduced last year but now stalled - that would prohibit all genetic-counseling facilities, clinics, and labs from divulging the sex of the fetus. The hope is that if parents don’t know “it’s a girl,” fewer will resort to abortion. But the proposal, which would amend a 1994 law, is opposed by medical groups. They argue that technology used to monitor fetal health - such as ultrasound scans and amniocentesis - cannot be put under such intense scrutiny.
India
Female infanticide has been practised in India for thousands of years, but with the increased availability of modern sex determination techniques such as amniocentesis, ultrasound and trans-vaginal probes, sex-selective abortion has become common in most of India’s big cities.
In 1990, there were 25 million more males than females in India and by 2001 the gender gap had risen to 35 million. Experts now estimate that it may reach 50 million. 3 Isabelle Attané, Une Chine sans Femmes ?, Perrin, Paris 2005 6 Compared to 1991 when only two districts - Salem and Bhind - had an adverse female sex ratio, as many as 51 districts in India now have more male babies born compared to female,
according to UNICEF.”In 80 per cent of districts in India, the situation is getting worse”.
4·According to the UNFPA 2003 statistics, there were 770 girls counted for every 1000 boys in the district of Haryana (one of India richest states), 814 girls in Ahmadabad (Gujarat), and 845 in South West Delhi.
According to the Christian Medical Association of India5 in New Delhi when the third child coming after 2 previous girls is a female foetus, 70% of them are aborted leading to 219 girls for every 1000 boys born. When the first child born is a girl, the birth ratio becomes 558 girls born for every 1000 boys.
According to the British medical journal The Lancet (9 January 2006), over 10 million female foetuses (1 in every 25) have been aborted in India since 1994. The journal also reports that prenatal sex-selection in India causes the loss of 500,000 girls per year.
China
In 2000, 138 boys were born for every 100 girls in the provinces of Jiangxi and Guangdong, which is 30% above the biological norm.
Caucasus
In 2005, 115 boys were born for every 100 girls in Azerbaidjan, and respectively 118 and boys for 100 girls in Georgia and Armenia. This points to an alarmingly increasing trend in female foeticide given that in 1995 the biological birth ratios in these countries were recorded as stable.
2. Girl Infanticide
Discrimination does not end with the sex-selective abortion of female foetus. In most cases, it continues beyond birth. Despite the progress made due to government-run programmes for instance in India, the girl child continues to lack adequate nutrition, healthcare, education and maternal care. The child mortality data indicates that a larger number of female children do 4 UNICEF, 2007 World’s Children Report 5
Christian forum alarmed at female foeticides in Indian capital, Anto Akkara, Ecumenical News International,
18 July 2005 7 not reach the age of five. And India and China are among the countries where boys far
outnumber girls at age five, as reported by UNICEF 6
FORMS OF INFANTICIDE
The crude methods of eliminating girl babies after birth include poisoning, throat splitting, starvation, smothering and drowning which illustrate the insignificance accorded to these young female lives 7.
Cases of female infanticide in Indian North Arrot villages were often reported as natural deaths or still births. Some parents have even succeeded in having false death certificates issued after bribing doctors. The bodies of the infant girls are then burned to destroy any evidence. Further when evidence surfaced that people were poisoning their girl children, they began to adopt methods such as starving the baby to death
8.Many other girl children are disposed of, often in garbage dumps. Although some girls are found and revived, most die. Brutal treatments of mothers and newborn girls have been reported in cases where a daughter is born instead of the desired son
9. The mother and newly born baby are treated badly because they are viewed as a burden and often receive no medical care.
Eighty to ninety percent of victims of female infanticide are girls of higher birth order (when there are more than two in a family). The girls who survive are likely to suffer neglect as parents often do not hide their contempt for these girls. Most of the killings of these infant girls are committed by senior women in the family.
Each year the number of girls who die is higher than boys. This is an unnatural phenomenon caused, in part, by girl infanticide. A 2001 National Family Health survey in India showed that post neonatal mortality is 13 percent higher for females than for males. Child mortality figures were 43 percent higher for females than for males. Yet, the scientific facts show that genetically girls are considered stronger and more resilient than boys at the time of birth. The 6 UNICEF, op.cit. 7
Gendercide Watch, Female infanticide 2000 p.1-9 8 Nielsen, Liljestrand, Hadegaard British Medical Journal 1997, 24 May, vol 314:1521 9
PHREB, Bengladesh, 2005 8 abnormal mortality rates, therefore, have to be affected by the tragic reality of girl infanticide, including neglect and abandonment.
Many girls who are granted the right to be born are then denied the right to basic lifesustaining nutrition and health and are instead neglected by their families and communities. The resulting ill health of the child often leads to death.
Studies have shown that neglect and abandonment during the first few years of life leave a lasting mark on a child’s life, and can often result in the death of the child 10. Girl children, in particular, are often victims of deadly neglect and abandonment due to culture, tradition, religious beliefs and social attitudes that continue to make girls vulnerable in the family and the community. In many countries, the girl child endures a low social status that results in fewer rights and benefits than the boy child. In those countries, the issue of adequate food and basic living conditions necessary for the survival of the girl child is of little concern to the members of the communities. These social customs tend to give preference to boys.
Tens of thousands of unwanted baby girls are abandoned in China. Some of the abandoned girls are admitted to the nation’s overcrowded orphanages that cannot sufficiently care for the girls
11. The likelihood of survival beyond one year for newly admitted orphans in China’s welfare system was less than 50 percent, although these girls can be subjected to starvation, torture and sexual assault over many years, leading to unnatural deaths
12.II. ROOT CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES
The root causes leading to female foeticide are complex and reflect diverse political, economical, social, cultural and religious practices, none of which justify such a violation of human rights.
10 UNICEF, 2000 State of the world’s children
11 WHO world report on Violence, 1999
12 Death by Default, Human Rights Watch, January 1996 9
1. Cultural Factors
India
India has an age old fascination with the boy child. The culture in India is profoundly patriarchal and is a feudal society where women are neither seen nor heard. There is societal pressure for women to have male children and as a result women are often considered failures and tend to feel guilty after giving birth to a girl. Women who are considered to have less value because they did not give their husbands a son are at risk of being beaten and rejected by their husbands. Giving birth to a girl can lead to rejection by in-laws and by the community as a whole. “If you don’t kill your girl, you are rejected by the community and/or
by your in-laws”acccording to Manjeet Rathee, an English teacher.
13 In the Hindu religion, the son is responsible for lighting his parents’ pyre, in order for them to reach Nirvana, and having only girls in the family amounts to being condemned to a lower caste in the next world. In Punjab - where the illiteracy rate is close to 70 percent - there are places of worship called “Son temples,” exclusively for people who want a male child.
The superstitions are various and some are very detrimental to girls. For example, ‘Blessings and curses’ of Eunuchs, who travel from village to village to curse mothers who have girls while blessing those with baby boys. Another superstition is that if the first child is a girl and that girl is killed, the next child will be a boy.
China
Historical Chinese marriage customs “Ever since ancient times, there has been a saying that the three most delightful moments in one’s life come with success in the imperial examination, marriage and the birth of a son” 14. In Confucianism, sons (and particularly the eldest) are responsible for the ancestors’ cult.
One-Child Policy in China
There are 80 million one-child families 15 and the son preference is particularly prevalent in rural areas, which has led to forced abortion and sterilization. China remains unwilling to give up this policy despite the recognition that it exacerbates the trend to abort female foetuses. 13 The Sunday Observer, Ranjit Devraj, 27 July 2003 14 Historical Chinese Marriage Customs in Travel China Guide, last updated, 25 December 2006 15 Xinhua, Gender Imbalance in Birth rate, 12 July 2006 10
2. Social and Economic Factors
Among the factors which lead to a consideration of females as less valuable, the following are of special importance: 10
2. Social and Economic Factors
Inheritance:
In many regions of rural India there is a strict social taboo on a daughter inheriting land, since if she does so the land is lost by her father’s lineage. If a woman attempted to exercise her legal claim to her share of her parents’immovable property, she would be likely to lose the affection of her brothers together with their sense of obligation to support her in a family emergency or in the event she is widowed without sons. The recent Hindu Succession (Amendment) Act 2005 which deleted the gender discriminatory clause on agricultural land only benefits Hindu women leaving intact the obstacle faced by non-Hindu women.
- Furthermore women in many rural areas are economically reliant on men who are traditionally the breadwinners, custom which in turn impacts the imbalance in the employment sector.
- Having a boy allows the father to achieve better status in society, whereas having a baby girl is seen as a curse.
- Not only has the girl child been traditionally considered inferior to boys (she only does domestic chores) but also as a liability - a bride’s dowry can financially cripple a poorfamily. Moreover, the dowry practice can deteriorate into a method of extorsion of wealth from the bride’s to the groom’s parents, leaving many daughters’ parents in debt.
-”Raising a daughter is like watering someone else’s field”: deep-rooted saying among ruralpeople in China where elderly peasants traditionally can only depend on their sons.
Nevertheless, in the richest states like Haryana (India), sex-selective abortions are very common and also apply to well-educated women, for whom the girls’ deficit is even twice as high as for illiterate women. So, illiteracy and poverty are not the only factors, though we know that much can be achieved through education and improved living conditions. There is evidence that although the dowry was banned in India in 1961, and the caste tradition has been abolished, all these customs are deeply rooted in society and still prevail.
11 In some other areas of Asia, humiliation and even death are often the punishments for a mother who gives birth to a girl, because of the economic hardship and social stigma caused by a female child.
3. Consequences
Over the next 20 years, in parts of China and India there will be a 12 to 15 percent excess of
young men leading to an obvious bride shortage: between 2015 and 2030 there will be 25
million men in China who have no hope of finding a wife 16.
This can give rise to:
- A substantial increase in aggressions and organized crime
- Rape and other forms of violence against women
- Drug and alcohol abuse
- Situation where all men of the family share the same wife.
- Women being viewed as commodities: for example kidnapping and trafficking of girls across borders.
Inter-community trafficking, which is something relatively new, such as the “Paros” (women from the outside) phenomenon: women are easily bought just like commodities with a price range between 50 and 900 dollars; the younger the girl, the higher the price.
According to UNIFEM, 45,000 “Paros” have been sold in and around Haryana (India) in 2006 alone.
UNICEF 17 has warned that “the alarming decline in the child sex-ratio is likely to result in more girls being married at a younger age, more girls dropping out of education, increased mortality as a result of early child bearing and an associate increase in acts of violence against girls and women such as rape, abduction, trafficking and forced polyandry”.
16 Isabelle Attané, op. cit. 17 UNICEF, 2007 op.cit. 12 In a near future, we could see what Amin Maalouf describes in his book “Le premier siècle après Béatrice”:
“Today the social flaw of the male cult could become collective suicide“. We would therefore witness the “auto-genocide of the misogynous populations“
18. III. POSITIVE INITIATIVES
Results in some countries are encouraging:
1. India In 1994, India not only banned the misuse of ultrasound and other medical techniques but also condemned sex determination as a criminal offence.
Nevertheless, foeticide is still practiced due to the enormous family and social pressures to produce males. Moreover, they have only bolstered patriarchal values further undermining the status of women:
- Private clinics still openly advertise the services of sex determination.
- Obstetricians invest in mobile clinics with ultrasound equipment that can be driven into remote rural areas where the preference for male offspring runs high.
- Kits from the U.S. are available that allow women to know the sex of their baby in the comfort of their home.
- Abortion is so lucrative that many doctors do not want to see it curtailed. As a result, 11.2 million illegal abortions are performed each year off-the-record.
- Medical groups also argue that technology used to monitor foetal health - such as ultrasound scans and amniocentesis - cannot be put under such intense scrutiny.
- Officials in India say that the phenomenon has become uncontrollable. The reason may also be that “it suits so many people.”
In the district of Salem (Tamil Nadu), government schemes suggest that parents should not kill their unwanted girls but abandon them in cradles where 621 babies were left in 2005.19
18 Amin Maalouf, Le Premier siècle après Béatrice, Grasset, Paris, 1992
19 According to Rohini Mohan, CNN IBN 2006 charities feel this encourages people to throw away babies. In fact, how can such a system that reinforces son preference continue to be promoted?
Many poor families with girls in India were given financial incentives in the name of the infant girls. But like the “cradle baby” scheme, “girl protection schemes” were more the result of political plotting and, therefore, were short-lived even though girl child lives were spared because of those measures
20. On a more positive note, the Indian State Chief Minister, Bhupinder Singh Hooda declared 2006 the Year of the Girl Child. He introduced an innovative incentive program called “Ladli” or the “adored one”, carrying an incentive of Rs 5000 ($100) per year for five years on the birth of a second daughter in a family. If a family has one daughter or only daughters, the parents would be entitled to get old age allowance of Rs300 ($6) per month after the age of 55. Financial perks are indeed alluring incentives
21.Where NGOs accompany young mothers and their baby girls from birth to the age of 2 months, giving them food and support, mothers become attached to their daughters and in some places infanticide has decreased up to fifty percent within 10 years
22.That is why organising “Support groups” with mothers from different backgrounds or ages (mothers in law, young brides, grand-mothers… to discuss about the issue of the girl child appears to have a very positive impact.
However, the challenge remains:
Decades of policy efforts have not achieved positive change. In fact the worsening ratios indicate that the situation is deteriorating rather than improving. Today, the focus of most Indian government policies related to son preference has been on reducing sex-selective abortions, but with little or no result.
UNICEF
23. notes that while the pre-natal diagnostic testing legislation has been passed in India, the enforcement is lagging with only one conviction to date. 20 Kirubhakaran, Social Welfare Program, 1993, 21Anuj Chopra, Gulf News, Weekend Review, 31 August 2006, 22 Documentary broadcast on TV Channel ARTE: “La malédiction de naître fille” THEMA, 24 October 2006, 23 UNICEF: op.ci 14 Femal foeticide can be considered as a mass crime facilitated by the medical community. Local initiatives by NGOs are to be encouraged as they do wonderful work on the ground and have the ability to save many lives.
2. China
The program “Care for Girls” was launched by the State Population and Family Planning Commission in 2003 in 24 pilot countries. This program provides social benefits, including cash payments, to families with only girls in order to enhance the status of girls and women.
Through such measures, some Chinese families have come out of poverty as they are entitled to accommodation and pensions when they get old. These families begin to feel more confident in the future and become less afraid of having girls
24.Kong Dehong, a 77th generation descendant of Confucius has recently declared: “In feudal society men were superior to women. I guess that is why women were not qualified to be included in the family tree. Our women are equal now. We have to adapt to the times.” So, there has been a change and we hope that this big step will have an effect on reducing the discrimination of the girl child
25.
3. Other Countries
South Korea
Government policies in South Korea have also succeeded in reversing the trend quite rapidly.
From the mid-nineties, the government took measures to reverse this trend with positive results so that the girl vs. boy ratio is almost back to normal. There is evidence here that political will is of prime importance in achieving desired results. Enforcing laws and implementing policies are possible as long as all participants pursue the same objective
26. 24 China promotes girls to avoid glut of bachelors, China Daily, 08 August 2006, 25 Jane Macartney, The Times UK, 28 September 2006 26 Isabelle Attané, op.cit. 15
The Philippines. In the Philippines, an anti-child abuse, discrimination and exploitation division was established
27. A children’s training workshop on the girl child was also held which celebrated a week for the protection and fair gender treatment of the girl child.
CONCLUSION
The magnitude of the phenomena of female foeticide and girl infanticide in India, China and other parts of Asia has reached a critical level creating a worldwide demographic imbalance with, in turn, drastic economic and social consequences. Over 100 million women are now missing in Asia which will result in a 12 to 15 percent excess of young men in the next twenty years.
This report has argued that female foeticides or sex selective abortions, promoted by modern medical techniques, have dramatically increased in the last ten years thus exacerbating the killing of girls. Yet nothing can justify these killings.
As Swami Agnivesh, religious leader and social activist, said last year when talking about foeticides: “There’s no other form of violence that’s more painful, more abhorrent, more shameful“.
Female foeticide not only denies the girl child her most basic human right - the right to be born - but it also turns women into silent victims. Scientific evidence has shown that mothers who have been put under pressure to kill their baby girls remain deeply hurt and injured for the rest of their lives as they cannot forget their own offspring.
This report has mainly focused on two areas on the killing of girls but other practices leading to the death of the girl child need to be mentioned:
“Honour” killing, usually defined as an act of murder in which a woman or a girl is killed for her actual or perceived immoral behaviour, tends to affect a large number of countries due to increasing migration. “Honour” killings are either decided and performed by the parents or relatives of the woman or girl or by the state as in the case of stoning. Such killings have been reported inter alia in Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Brazil, Britain, Ecuador, Egypt, France, 27
Reported by Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA) Project, 2004 16
India, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Italy, Jordan, Morocco, Pakistan, the Palestinian Territories, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey and Uganda.
Sexual abuse of girl children is also often fatal and takes many forms including rape and sexual exploitation including the phenomenon of snuff movies 28 made possible through the misuse of new mediatechnologies. During war time rape is used as a weapon of war and as a way of durably humiliating the enemy, thus exacerbating violence. Contamination by HIVAIDS of young “virgins” as a way of purification of the man is also leading to the death of very young girls.
Additionally, female genital mutilation and early marriage with its consequences of exceedingly young childbearing are practices which result in medical complications and often lead to the early death of the girl child.
It will take generations to change people’s mindset but the situation worldwide is so dramatic that we cannot afford to wait any longer. It is imperative that the International community calls on the governments and all actors responsible for this human and demographic tragedy to enact laws and take urgent measures to fight these violence and discrimination which, by denying the first basic right of all - the right to life - denies all other human rights. 28
Snuff movies are short films, generally of bad quality, showing a (supposedly) real murder, often preceded by pornography including women and child rape.
17 Statement to CSW 51 Working Group on the Girl Child
Of the NGO Committee on the Status of Women in Geneva Written statement to the 51st
Session of the Commission on the Status of Women - 26 February-9 March 2007
Submitted and endorsed by the following NGOs:
Association Country Women of the World
European Federation of Women Active in the Home - Fédération Européenne des Femmes
Actives au Foyer
Federation of American Women’s Clubs Overseas
Femmes Africa Solidarité
Institute for Family Policy
Inter-African Committee on Traditional Practices
International Association of Gerontology and Geriatrics
International Council of Jewish Women
International Council of Women - Conseil International des Femmes
International Federation of University Women
International Inner Wheel
Pan Pacific and South East Asia Women’s Association International
Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom
Women’s International Zionist Organization
Women’s World Summit Foundation
World Movement of Mothers - Mouvement Mondial des Mères
World Union of Catholic Women’s Organization
Worldwide Organization for Women
We, the above named Non Governmental Organizations in consultative status with ECOSOC,
through this statement and our report on girl infanticide and female foeticide that will be presented and distributed during the CSW in its 51st session, reaffirm and call attention to the inherent dignity and the equal and inalienable rights of the girl child. Despite the legal human rights framework and namely the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), we are deeply concerned with the phenomena of girl infanticide and female foeticide, which deny the girl child the most basic human right, the right to be born. Not only has the status of the girl child not improved but in many regions of the world, it has worsened and its future is threatened.
Girl infanticide, which consists of killing a baby girl at or very soon after birth is a traditional practice most common in India and China, but also spreading to other parts of Asia.
Female foeticide is a modern version of infanticide which consists of killing a female foetus via sex-selective abortions. Female foeticide, which has rapidly increased over the last ecade, is even more perverse than girl infanticide in that modern technology has made it easier, more silent and an industry has developed to promote it.
18 Both these practices are based on the traditional belief that a girl is less valuable than a boy, and therefore is not worth living. Mainly due to cultural, religious or social factors and practices, such as dowry requirements and inheritance laws, having a girl child is still considered a burden or a failure in many countries. There is no rational explanation for this phenomenon, given the knowledge that sex-selective abortions are even more common in wealthier and educated families.
The magnitude of this human rights violation is building to a worrisome demographic imbalance with economical and social consequences worldwide:
- Killing of girls in the most populated countries means fewer wives and mothers and in turn, fewer girls and mothers for future generations resulting into a greater imbalance in the number of men and women in the world. Over 100 million women are missing, which will result in a 12 to 15 per cent excess of young men in the next twenty years and therefore a bride shortage. For example, between 2015 and 2030, 25 million Chinese will have no hope of finding a wife 29.
- Trafficking of girls and women across borders and within communities is developing at an alarmingly high speed. This only enhances the traditional power structure detrimental to women: becoming seen as a commodity and therefore holding less value. The “paros” phenomenon or the import of “women from the outside” sadly illustrates this situation as girls are easily bought- and the younger the girl, the higher the price.
- Forced marriages are increasing dramatically, in some cases forcing young women into marrying and belonging to several men at the same time.
The phenomena of girl infanticide and female foeticide are alarming and this is the reason why we are calling upon the UN Commission on the Status of Women, in its 51st session focusing on the elimination of all forms of discrimination and violence against the girl child to:
- Reaffirm the equal dignity of men and women, and especially the right to be born.
We also call upon the UN CSW to request political commitment from governments to:
- strengthen and implement laws against girl infanticide;
- amend laws that create and support the conditions where women are seen as a burden, such as inheritance laws and dowry requirements;
- create an environment favorable to girls, for example by giving allowances to families who welcome girls;
- provide education on gender equality;
- support good local initiatives from NGOs which support families with girl children from pregnancy onwards.
Madame Chair, nothing can justify the mass-killing, torture, ill-treatment or sale of girls. We expect that at this UN CSW, a recommendation will be adopted to address this deplorable situation. 29
Isabelle Attané, Une Chine sans Femmes ?, Perrin, Paris 2005 and L’Asie manque de Femmes, article from
Le Monde Diplomatique, July 2006 19
Reference to Major Treaties and Other Documents
- Convention on the Rights of the Child (1989), and its optional protocols (2000).
- Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) (1979), and its optional protocol (1999).
- International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (1966).
- International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (1966).
- Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action (1995).
- “Beijing +5″ Political Declaration and Outcome Document (2000) and all follow up, including the CSW Special Session “Beijing +10″ (2005).
- Millenium Development Goals (MDGs) (2000).
- Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948).
- Charter of the United Nations (1947). 20
Summary
Principal causes for female foeticide and girl infanticide
- Traditions: social pressure stronger than law girls considered as a useless economic burden misunderstanding of the importance of the committed crime non respect of women’s rights exclusion of women from their societies if traditions are not followed superstition, religious beliefs
- Illiteracy:
ignorance of the human body and the way it functions ignorance of the laws in force
- Poverty Principal consequences of female foeticide and girl infanticide
- For women: high risk of death high risk of disease / malformation mental traumatism
For society:
Demographic imbalance (ex. villages of bachelors in India, lack of young women in age of marriage in China, etc… this creating, among other things, violence, alcoholism, theft, depression, drugs and rape.
21 Actions / Recommendations
Non Governmental Organisations (NGOs) should:
- make sure that: national governments implement international treaties; local governments are aware of women’s and girls’ rights; co-operation and information-sharing within the NGO community are facilitated.
- draw the attention of professional bodies (doctors, lawyers, social workers, etc..) to women and girls’ human rights and make them aware of equal rights between men and women.
- urge heads of different religious communities in the world to contribute toward making traditions evolve according to the Beijing Platform for Action.
- support village (community) education committees with the help of specially trained educators in girls’ rights.
- promote programs including “gender equality” for teachers training children and adults.
- educate men/women, boys/girls to have a better understanding of the specific needs or situations of women and girls (health, nutrition, security, empowerment….
- reinforce girls’educational skills to empower them to become more self reliant and thus less vulnerable to conditions which can lead to death.
- better support mothers through the establishment of feeding programs so girls can flourish.
- urge governments to: review and implement laws concerning sanctions for infanticide. foresee special allowances in the case of female birth. Without girls… no society 22
Working Group on the Girl Child Report published on the occasion of the United Nations Commission on the Status of Women 51st Session - 26 February to 9 March 2007
“It can be difficult being a girl here,” she said.