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    Sex-selective Abortion in India: Asking and Answering the Questions

    Beloo Mehra, PhD

    Published inSulekha, April 2003

    Introduction

    Research on Sex-Selective Abortion in India: Evidence, Arguments, and Rhetoric

    Locating Indian Missing Women in Global Gender-gap

    Abortion: Sex-Selective or Otherwise

    Concluding Thoughts

    Introduction

    Barbara Miller coined the phrase The Endangered Sex. Amartya Sen used the phrase Missing

    Women. They were referring to those who are also known simply as Unborn Girls.

    These are examples of some of the sensationalist terminology social scientists and activists have

    been using to highlight the problem of female infanticide or female feticide in India. In this

    article, I will mostly use the more value-neutral term sex-selective abortion though at certain

    places references to other terms will be made to emphasize or highlight a point.

    This article presents an analysis of a month-long intense discussion that happened at IndDiaspora

    surrounding this highly charged (emotionally, politically, and culturally) topic of sex-selectiveabortion. The purpose of this article is NOT to project any one particular understanding of the

    issue. Instead, the objective is to tie together several different opinions, facts, interpretations, and

    arguments in some sort of a thematic analysis that provides readers with a multi-faceted view ofthe issue(s). I believe such a layered presentation can then allow for more critical discussion and

    dialogue among the readers.

    It all started when I posted an article that appeared in October 24, 2002 edition of The HindustanTimes. The article, titledDeath of an Unborn Girlwas written by Arundhuti Roy Chaudhury.

    Citing the dramatic drop in the sex ratio of the girl child population in the 0-6 age group, from

    962 girls per 1,000 boys in 1981 to 945 girls/1,000 boys in 1991, and 927 girls/1,000 boys in

    2001 as one of the disquieting trends that surfaced in the 2001 census, she asks the question:Are girls being deliberately eliminated? Is technology (ultrasonography, amniocentesis, chorion

    villi biopsy, foetoscopy, material serum analysis, etc.) assisting in this systematic elimination?

    Her reply: To a great extent, yes.

    http://beloo-mehra.sulekha.com/blog/post/2003/04/sex-selective-abortion-in-india.htmlhttp://beloo-mehra.sulekha.com/blog/post/2003/04/sex-selective-abortion-in-india.htmlhttp://beloo-mehra.sulekha.com/blog/post/2003/04/sex-selective-abortion-in-india.htmlhttp://beloo-mehra.sulekha.com/blog/post/2003/04/sex-selective-abortion-in-india.html
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    The article was enough to spark a passionate discussion on the topic, as is obvious from this

    reaction by a fellow member:

    As usual, Arun(dhat tereki) Roy - if indeed she is the same person - is back to her well honedtricks; making unwarranted linkages, jumping to conclusions and generally playing the class

    clown with considerable success, It speaks volumes of the mush that Indians have for brains thatthey swallow Roy's concoctions with nary a croak while she goes laughing & cackling all theway to her bank vault.

    What exactly is Roy recommending? Clearly, she is not against abortions, only female abortions.More specifically, she is focusing on the relative differences in abortion rates by gender i.e.

    abortion is fine as long as it is split 50-50 between males/ females. And she wants taxpayer

    money to be spent on enforcing this mathematical equality? What exactly is she smoking?

    Impressive and colorful response this might be, the critical questions in this debate however are

    these: are all abortions wrong? For anyone to raise a voice against female feticide, does the

    person have to first take a position against all abortions? Why? Are the reasons for any abortionsame as reasons for selective abortion of a female fetus? What kind of evidence has been

    presented to suggest that sex-selective abortion is a problem in India? What does research

    suggest as possible reasons for the declining sex ratios in India? Should we look at the issue of

    declining sex ratio in India in a global comparative framework? Should we also study the issueof sex-selective abortion in India within the context of a larger debate on abortion in India and

    elsewhere?

    Our discussions at IndDiaspora covered many of these questions. At times it was obvious that

    people held on strongly to their positions, but at other times it was also clear that the passionate

    and frank discussion allowed people to see alternative perspectives on this very complex issue.

    When I first collated and sorted through all the posts on this thread, several important issues

    begin to emerge, including:

    1. Freedom to make decisions regarding ones reproductive choices: Indian women vs.

    Western women

    2. Familial and social pressures to bear a male child/heir3. Personally heard stories or lived experiences: Are these anecdotal evidence enough to

    consider sex-selective abortion an Indian problem?

    4. Is girl child considered a liability?: Social and economic reasons

    5. Education and empowerment of women6. Role of sex-determination technology: Problem or a solution?

    As complex and worth discussing as all these issues are, much has already been written by

    scholars, social activists, feminists, policy experts, religious leadersat national andinternational levels. Further reading and analysis of the IndDiaspora discussions led me to focus

    on those selected themes of the debate that are not fully explored in the current literature on this

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    issue1. These selected themes, which are by themselves interconnected and complex, also

    provide contextual framework for all the above six and any other themes that may emerge in

    readers follow-up discussions. The three themes discussed in this paper are:

    A. Research on Sex-Selective Abortion in India: Evidence, Arguments, and Rhetoric

    B.

    Locating Indias Missing Women in Global Gender-gapC. Abortion: Sex-Selective or Otherwise

    Within each of these themes, there are several sub-topics and issues worth serious reflection and

    discussion. As and when needed, I will be making references to other related issues that werediscussed at IndDiaspora, including but not limiting to the six pointed earlier.

    Research on Sex-Selective Abortion in India: Evidence, Arguments, and Rhetoric

    We spent enough time in our conversations exploring what hard facts exist on this topic of sex-selective abortion in India. We wanted to know who are doing investigations on this issue, how

    and what conclusions are they reaching at. One member set up the challenge this way:

    Do [we] know of any scientific study on this phenomenon? Or are we freelancing strictly bynewspaper reports? Now, we could be true post-modernists and simply dispense with facts and

    move on to lived experiences. Here again, maybe I'm not moving in the right circles but this is

    simply not *my* lived experience. Nobody in our immediate family has done this; none from ourextended families; none of my friends & none of my colleagues at work have done this. At least I

    haven't heard of any such thing and this covers about a 100 families. So, who exactly is doing

    this? Maybe we're all doing this but simply not telling anyone about it? But then, if this is such a

    culturally accepted thing, then there is really no reason *not* to talk about it openly, is there?Btw, do you know of anyone in your family or extended family that has selectively aborted even

    one female?...if you have no hard evidence or lived experiences to support your claim, then let

    me ask you in all seriousness: from where and how did you arrive at your opinion of gender-preferred abortions in India? Actually, this question is open for anyone in this forum to answer.

    Another member responded:

    Nobody may be able to furnish the proof you seek to satisfy you that female foeticide is

    happening. People do not exactly advertise these things. Just as teenagers in India may not go on

    TV and say "You know, my uncle raped / molested me the other day" even though it is anacknowledged truth that familial incest is an ugly, largely unreported, not just underreported

    problem in India. AS IT IS IN OTHER COUNTRIES I AM SURE.

    But as we soon found out, there is enough evidence. The reliability and credibility of thatevidence may be questionable, and the sponsoring or funding sources of these investigations

    1All the conversations at IndDiaspora, when compiled in a Word file, made up for a 182-page file. So it was

    essential to limit the scope of this article in order to not lose reader interest.

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    may be open for discussion. One may also choose to believe or reject this evidence depending

    on ones viewpoint, but as a group interested in finding whats really going on here we looked at

    some of this evidence.

    The first, most readily available source we looked into is available in the form of a report at

    Harvard Universitys website

    2

    . While we can't verify the accuracy of the report, we consideredusing it as a starting point.

    We found out about Prof. Sunil Khanna, an associate professor of Anthropology at Oregon State

    University's College of Liberal Arts. For the past 10 years, he has conducted extensive researchon female feticide and has worked with an activist group in India that is lobbying the government

    to address the problem3. Khanna's analysis may probably seem as what some would call as neo-

    colonialist4. But it helped us ask several relevant questions in our investigation. As one member

    pointed out:

    One stark fact immediately jumps out at you. For the 20 year period covered from 1982 to

    present between the two links, there is *not a single documented case* that any of the"researchers" can cite! This is despite the fact of...

    1. Massive foreign funding having been poured into research efforts like Khanna's, setting up &

    operating NGOs in Mumbai, publications etc. For example, even back in 1982 they hadsufficient funds to survey over 2000 physicians, set up functioning offices, publish reports,

    organize protests, lobby the government etc, etc, etc. This was just in Mumbai alone.

    2. This issue being supposedly so "prevalent" in society that anybody can see what was

    happening, daily (even by the hour).

    Good observations, but here is another side to this - are we saying that because these facts arehard to come by, that there is no problem? Even Indian doctors writing in medical journals have

    admitted that it is a common knowledge that selective abortions of females are taking place5.

    How did this become common knowledge if it is not happening? Are all these people justfollowing the line of Eurocentric, neo-colonialist foreign NGOs, UNFPA, UN, women's

    organizations etc.?

    A member pointed out that without hard facts it is difficult to get a clue of the size, the scope, the

    specific nature of the problem. He continued:

    2 http://www.hsph.harvard.edu/Organizations/healthnet/SAsia/articles/sexdetermination2.html

    3Some details of Khannas work can be found at:http://www.orst.edu/Dept/anthropology/sunres1.htm

    4See for example -

    http://www.orst.edu/dept/ncs/newsarch/2002/Jun02/abort.htm

    5S.S Sheth & A. N. Malpani, Inappropriate use of new technology: Impact on womens health, International Journal

    of Gynecology & Obstetrics, 58 (1997) 159-165; V. Hingorani & G. Shroff, Natural sex selection for safe

    motherhood and as a solution for population control, International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics, 56 (1995)

    S169-S171.

    http://www.hsph.harvard.edu/Organizations/healthnet/SAsia/articles/sexdetermination2.htmlhttp://www.orst.edu/Dept/anthropology/sunres1.htmhttp://www.orst.edu/Dept/anthropology/sunres1.htmhttp://www.orst.edu/Dept/anthropology/sunres1.htmhttp://www.orst.edu/dept/ncs/newsarch/2002/Jun02/abort.htmhttp://www.orst.edu/dept/ncs/newsarch/2002/Jun02/abort.htmhttp://www.orst.edu/dept/ncs/newsarch/2002/Jun02/abort.htmhttp://www.orst.edu/Dept/anthropology/sunres1.htmhttp://www.hsph.harvard.edu/Organizations/healthnet/SAsia/articles/sexdetermination2.html
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    How can we be blind to the fact that many outsiders deliberately avoid going into hard facts

    not because it is "hard" to get evidence but because they want to leave things precisely at a

    general level to implicate the entire culture instead of targeting culpable individuals?

    One can readily agree to these arguments, but the question remains: why have all these so-callededucated people, including statisticians, doctors, social workers etc. been assuming all this timethat there is a problem? Let us hypothesize for a minute. So, some group of people somewhere

    looked at the census data and made an on-the-spot conclusion that it must be because people are

    selectively aborting female fetuses. And everybody just ran with the idea. Scholars in the Westlearned about it and obviously made up a story about missing girls of India. Enter the women's

    organizations, NGOs, UN, etc. and all of a sudden the myth /tentative assumption became the

    truth! Does this sound like what could have happened?

    About the non-availability of hard evidence, one member asked the question: Isn't the census

    data itself evidence of a gap between men and women? Is this not a social problem? Or is the

    fact of gender gap itself in question?

    The response came from another:

    The Indian censusshows that there is a gap over all in India. A significant gap also exists in theUS under-14 population; has existed for over 50 yrs and is increasing in favor of boys. Every

    country in the world will show a gap - it is impossible to find a 50-50 mix. What possible

    conclusions can one possibly draw from all this? If the mere existence of a gap indicates a"social problem," then should we admit that the same social problem also exists wherever such

    gaps are found, including the US?

    Can one argue that in most research on sex-selective abortion in India, researchers look at gendergap in the census figures, and attribute it to practices such as female infanticide and female

    feticide? And connections are made without fully examining the evidence. One can understand

    people like Khanna and few other researchers becoming a victim to the Western academic modelwhere everything derogatory about India (or the so-called Third World) sells. But for such a

    large section of Indian population who believes (or assumes) that selective abortion does take

    place - how can one explain their brainwashing? As one member reasoned, The capacity ofpeople for self-delusion is limitless.

    Maybe its just me but I find it hard to consider the issue of gender-inequality in India (or

    anywhere else) in the same way as peoples capacity for self-delusion. And maybe because I seeIndia and world as a woman, and because I know the problem of gender-inequality is very real

    not just in India but everywhere, I find it easier to believe that some people may actually choose

    to not have more girls if they consider them as more of a liability than boys. And if they are

    given access to inexpensive technology to help them decide whether or not to have one moregirl, they may choose to use the technology to avoid having her6.

    6In our group, we also had some informative discussion examining whether sex-determination technology is

    actually a problem or a solutionat individual and societal level.

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    However, none of this in any way implies that preference for a son is in some way specific to

    Indian society. Most people whether they are British, Indian, Vietnamese or American who

    already have one or two daughters would probably like to have a son if given a chance. In fact,just recently an Indian friend from Texas told me about her American neighbor who has three

    daughters and is pregnant again, with hopes to have a son this time. This woman also told my

    friend that she is willing to try again if she doesnt have a son this time. Whether this is a son-preference, or simply a desire to have both sons and daughters, this must be seen as part ofhuman nature.

    Another member of the group told us about her conversation with one of her adult students fromMexico: He [the student] said traditionally boys were preferred in rural Mexico especially, in

    order to defend the community against outsiders.

    So while some researchers may have been quick in making a connection between decliningfemale to male ratio in India and son-preference as something specific to Indian culture, at best

    what we have is a tentative hypothesis: if a gender-gap exists, could it be because of selective

    abortion? Many researchers, activists, and social critics have concluded: YES, selective abortionis the cause of gender-gap. Could it be that this is a case of more than self-delusion?

    One member commented:

    I dont know of any documented evidence which would prove that the gender gap in India is a

    product of, or largely influenced by selective abortion of female foetuses. However, I can say

    from my lived experience in India that selective abortion of female fetuses does occur and thereare both economic and cultural reasons for it (if we were to insist to distinguish between the

    two). I would definitely be surprised if such data does not exist.

    To this a response came:

    Eschewing hard evidence sets a very dangerous precedent indeed. Bear with me while I give

    you an example. Consider this one Indian state where the official census shows a clear sex ratioin favor of girls. Now, I really have no hard evidence of selective abortions in this state but the

    census does not lie, does it? So, if I really wanted to, I could very easily make the case that

    1. millions of little boys go "missing" in this state each year

    2. this state has a long and demonstrable history of foreign influences

    3. this state is even today a hotbed of foreign NGO activity

    4. this state encourages a steady influx of foreign funds5. therefore, this state encourages selective abortion of boys to weaken the military base of the

    state and ultimately the country

    You can imagine the mass hysteria that would result were I to apply the full force of propagandatechniques to this thesis.

    All this insistence on producing hard evidence compelled one member to write this:

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    What hard evidence? I dont know about the other states, but there is enough evidence in TN,

    so much so that the TN government started the 'cradle' scheme. The government hospitals and

    health care centres in Dharmapuri and Salem districts sport cradles in their campuses, where

    women are encouraged to anonymously drop off unwanted female infants.

    About abortions of female fetuses, I am personally acquainted with two women who abortedtheir third child after sex determination. They were married to an engineer and charteredaccountant respectively. They did their sex determination in Bombay and had the abortions

    performed in Chennai. How the hell do you prosecute these people, unless confidantes like me

    tell on them and initiate a campaign?

    Your take seems to be, all abortions are bad, who cares if they are done on a selective basis or

    not. My take is, yes, abortions are bad, but abortions based on sex determination are even worse.

    The overall male-female ratio is always more females. If there is a lower female ratio, then it is

    definitely an artificially engineered situation. Now, dont ask me for 'hard evidence'. This is a

    well-known fact.

    A couple of members pointed out that most people, especially those from educated,

    middle/upper-middle classes that most of us tend to know, will not go on record saying that they

    chose to have an abortion after finding out that it was a girl. This could be one reason for lack ofhard evidence. Some other members shared the cases they knew of where middle-class people

    opted for sex-selective abortion. Of course, we agreed that there was no way to ascertain the

    specific reasons for these peoples decisions, as this is such a personal issue. But then that wouldbe a problem in any empirical study needed to establish the real causes for such a trend.

    One member shared the story of a colleague in the US who was pressured by her in-laws to have

    an abortion when she found out the second child was a girl. This woman and her husband refusedand had to move out from the joint family. Another member presented this evidence:

    In Bombay, you can find an abortion clinic in almost every nukkad. How would these clinicsthrive if there were no one sustaining them? My maid-servant in India did abort her girl because

    she had 4 other girls and wanted a boy. If most people in our society don't see this as a crime,

    who is going to report it to the authorities? How can there be any hard evidence? Most people,educated or uneducated have multiple children (mostly girls) in the hope of a boy. I know of a

    well-educated family who has 7 girls and then decided to stop because of financial constraints (I

    hope that their education helped them here!).

    Yet another member had this to say in terms of his evidence based on lived experience:

    Our maid, in my hometown, has delivered two daughters. Ever since she delivered second

    daughter, her husband and mother-in-law have stopped talking to her. They also ill-treat her athome. He has threatened her that he would marry again. My father had to pressurize an elderly

    and influential person in her locality to make sure things don't get out of hand. So it's only under

    pressure, and not willingly, that her husband and MIL are OK with her, for now.

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    This member also made a very important point that in his observation, in villages and small

    towns in India people try to settle sensitive issues among themselves or go to village elders for

    resolving such family related disputes, rather than going to police or court. This could be anotherreason for lack of hard evidence.

    In a 1999 article published in the journal Development and Change, Sudha and Rajan point outthat the practices of female infanticide and feticide, have not been well examined in India forreasons obviously connected with the sensitivity of the issues. The main findings not

    surprisingly come from the documentation efforts of women's groups and NGOs active in these

    fields rather than from academic research.

    Sex ratios at birth (SRBs), refer to the ratio of male to female children born in a specific period,

    such as a year, or among all the children ever born to cohorts of women. Sudha and Rajan point

    out that in India, most analyses focus on juvenile sex ratios rather than sex ratios at birth. Theygive following reasons:

    This is firstly because of the concern that excess female child mortality, which arises from theselective neglect of girl children compared to boys, manifests itself in childhood years rather

    than around the time of birth (Das Gupta, 1987; Dyson, 1988). Secondly, data on period sex

    ratios at birth are difficult to obtain in India, as the Census of India does not publish this

    statistic. Such data are only occasionally published by the Sample Registration System (SRS) ofcertain states, and thus nation-wide or time-trend analyses are ruled out. Vital statistics

    registration is of varying quality and completeness in different parts of the country, as are

    hospital records. Thus all-India or time-trend investigations of period SRBs are difficult,although some intra-state analyses are emerging (Visaria and Irudaya Rajan, 1996, for

    Kerala).

    Sudha and Rajan cite several regional analyses of juvenile sex ratios in India on the whole thathave indicated that more masculine juvenile sex ratios and higher female than male child

    mortality go hand in hand (Agnihotri, 1996; Clark and Shreeniwas, 1995; Das Gupta, 1987; Das

    Gupta and Bhat, 1997; Kishor 1993). In other words, higher juvenile sex ratios at ages 0-4 areaccompanied by higher female than male child mortality at ages 5-9. The authors state:

    A well-known regional pattern is observed: the Northern and North-western parts of India,including the states of Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan and Western UP, are areas most

    unfavourable to the life chances of female children. Other parts of the country, including the

    East, Central area and the South, exhibit more balanced rates.

    A broad generalization has been made: the North/North-western regions of India fall within the

    so-called Northern cultural and demographic zone, distinguished by higher fertility, higher

    mortality, more masculine sex ratios, and lower status of women. This zone traditionally had a

    wheat-based agrarian economy (where women are less involved), and social systems marked bydowry, exogamous marriage and the seclusion of women. In contrast, the South is broadly

    characterized by rice-based agrarian systems (with a greater role for women), endogamous

    marriage systems, marriage payments that are more egalitarian between brides' and grooms'families, and less seclusion of women. Women's literacy and education levels are also much

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    higher in the South than the North. The status of women is higher in the South, which also has

    lower fertility and mortality rates, and more 'normal' sex ratios (Dyson and Moore, 1983).7

    An assumption appears to have been made: since the sex ratio is more masculine, and there

    are economic and social reasons for not valuing girls as much as boys, people must be practicing

    female infanticide or female feticide. A lot of hard evidence on sex-selective abortion comesfrom newspaper reports or other indirect data. This is so because this issue has been primarilyreported in newspapers only, there hasn't been much scholarly research on this because of the

    difficulties involved in getting people to speak.

    Dr. Suddhendu Biswas, of Department of Statistics, University of Delhi, recently presented a

    paper titled, "On the Problem of Estimating Female Feticide Rates Based on Indirect Data" at

    International Population Research Center at Ohio State University8. This presentation is more

    about methodology/statistical analysis than the evidence or problem analysis.) But isnt this an

    7According to Suhda and Rajan:

    Other scholars rightly stress that the simplistic dichotomization of India into 'Northern' vs. 'Southern' zones is

    inadequate. The rice-cultivating Eastern region could never be fitted into either pattern. Within-region variations

    have been ignored in the dichotomization, such as the 'belt of female infanticide' in the Salem/Dharmapuri/Madurai

    districts of Tamil Nadu noted by Chunkath and Athreya (1997). Alternative spatial patterns ranging from five to

    nineteen clusters of India's districts have been proposed, taking into account ecological and economic sub-regions,

    areas with greater proportions of Scheduled Caste/Scheduled Tribe populations (who are characterized by more

    gender-egalitarian cultures), and other criteria. Even in these alternative groupings, however, juvenile sex ratios

    appear most masculine in the North/North-western region of India. A so-called 'Bermuda Triangle' for the female

    child exists in a zone of twenty-four districts including parts of Haryana, Western Uttar Pradesh, some of Rajasthan,

    and the ravine areas of Madhya Pradesh (Agnihotri, 1996).

    Socio-cultural trends in India also place women at an increased disadvantage. The traditional patrilineal,

    patrilocal, and exogamous marriage and kinship systems prevailing over much of the subcontinent have alwaysplaced women in a low-status, precarious position, until they earn their place in the patriline by bearing sons.

    Although the southern part of the sub-continent had more endogamous and egalitarian marriage systems, with

    matrilineal family forms in many Southwestern coastal communities, social change in these regions has tended to

    move towards normatively patrilineal systems. Significantly, scholars also note the spread of dowry nationwide to

    communities and castes where it had never been the custom. Insufficient research attention has been paid to this

    phenomenon. The bulk of sociological or anthropological research in India on the topic of kinship is abstract and

    descriptive in nature, viewing women as objects of study and exchange, and not problematizing the underlying

    causal and consequential genderrelations (Agarwal, 1994; Ramaswamy, 1993). Some scholars have begun to

    address this issue (for instance, Palriwala and Risseeuw, 1996), but there is little scrutiny of the relationship

    between kinship organization, gender relations, and women's life and death chances.

    Some attribute the spread of dowry to the process of 'Sanskritization', whereby lower castes achieve upward caste

    and class mobility by emulating the customs of the upper castes, including dowry and female seclusion. Othersattribute the changes to the young age structure of the country: the greater ratio of young marriageable girls to

    potential mates in the higher age group increases the 'price' of grooms (Rao, 1993). The rise of consumerism is also

    implicated, drawing people into a growing web of expectations and demands. The continued importance of kin

    networks for economic resource mobilization, the spread of the dowry custom, the growing amounts of dowry

    changing hands, and the increasing importance of resource acquisition strategies for family status enhancement,

    have led to the concentration of wealth in families where the ratio of male children is greater, and female children

    are therefore increasingly seen as liabilities (Clark, 1987; Heyer, 1992).

    8For any reader interested in reviewing Dr. Biswass presentation, please contact the author.

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    evidence for skeptics to see that statisticians are concerned about measurement problems of this

    issue, and a systematic investigation is taking place?

    Writing in the journal Feminist Issues, Manju Parikh notes:

    The most disturbing evidence was presented in a study conducted by a subcommittee of theFederation of Obstetricians' and Gynaecologists' Societies of India. Out of 8,000 cases, the studyreported that 7,999 were aborted when the test results showed a female fetus (Ravindra 1986:21;

    The Statesman, 17 December 1984). Another survey was done by Professor R.P. Ravindra of the

    Pharmacy College of the S.N.D.T. University of Bombay. In his research on 1000 cases inBombay, he could not find a single case of a male fetus being aborted, whereas 97 percent of the

    fetuses identified as female were aborted (Ravindra 1986:9).

    Finally, another set of comprehensive results was produced by Sanjeev Kulkarni of theFoundation for Research in Community Health. For his report, titled Sex-Determination Tests

    and Female Foeticide in Greater Bombay, he interviewed fifty gynecologists; 84 percent of them

    admitted that they were performing sex-determination tests. It was estimated that about 50,000sex-selective abortions were taking place annually in Bombay by 1987. There were 250 clinics in

    Bombay alone and 600 in the whole state of Maharashtra (Health Monitor 1988).

    We can either believe that this is true evidence, or we dismiss it all as propaganda based on theideological bent of the sources cited. If we choose the latter, then we should probably ignore

    every piece of data that goes against our view of the world. A lot goes around in the world that

    we dont approve of, that we dont want to believe, but that doesnt mean that it doesnt happen.While many of us agree that the sensational style of researchers analysis and writing can be

    avoided, the key questions are: does any evidence exist, and how credible that evidence is.

    Doubting the credibility of the findings by Sanjeev Kulkarni of the Foundation for Research inCommunity Health that are cited by Parikh, a member asked some incisive questions:

    What is this Foundation? Who funds it? Why? Why does the report use the unscholarly term"female foeticide" in its very title? And does this indicate pre-existing biases? the key

    statistics has no source cited i.e. 50,000 sex-selective abortions in 1987 in Bombay. If there were

    an unimpeachable source, would it not have been cited?

    It would require an expert on demographic researchsomeone who will figure out how given

    the lack of reliable data on births (especially birth of girls), abortions done in private clinics,

    deliveries and abortions performed by dais(midwifes not affiliated with any hospital/clinics) etc.these researchers calculate the numbers of sex-selective abortions they report. Only then, these

    reported numbers can be meaningfully challenged and a positive proof can be provided.

    (Perhaps some Sulekha readers may like to take this challenge. If that happens, a key objective of

    writing this column will be met.)

    Sudha and Rajan provide some more evidence collected through surveys and interviews:

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    "A 1982 study in Ludhiana, an urban area in Punjab state, randomly sampled 126 individuals, of

    whom approximately half each were male and female and most of whom were educated and

    middle class. All the respondents had heard of the amniocentesis test; 66 per cent of them

    thought it was intended for sex determination; few knew that it was actually for detecting foetalabnormalities. While 73 per cent of the women and 59 per cent of the men believed that a girl

    should be aborted if the couple already had two or more daughters, only 25 per cent of therespondents felt that a boy should be aborted if the couple already had two or more sons. Thereasons given indicated the nature of male-dominated society, dowry problems, greater

    responsibilities in bringing up daughters, and social pressure to bear sons. Over 71 per cent of

    the respondents felt that amniocentesis as a sex determination test should not be banned (Singhand Jain, 1985).

    These results were uncannily echoed over a decade later, in rural Maharashtra state, among six

    villages of Pune district, three with road and access to a health facility, and three others moreremote and without these amenities. Results indicated that 49 out of the 67 women interviewed

    in-depth were aware of ultrasound and/or amniocentesis techniques and 45 per cent of those

    who knew approved of aborting female foetuses. Only four women were aware that such testswere actually for the detection of foetal abnormalities (Gupte et al., 1997). The spread of

    awareness of these techniques to rural areas is thus clearly documented."

    The skewed sex ratio in the child population is of concern to anthropologists as a physicalmanifestation of patriarchal ideologies. In an anthropological study in a north Indian rural

    community, Wadley found that couples chose high fertility and sex-specific mortality to achieve

    a desired family composition in the larger context of social and economic change and that thesepractices increasingly place female lives in danger9. Based on an ethnographic research in one

    Haryana Village, Khanna suggests that the availability of new reproductive technologies

    provided the Shahargaon Jat community with an alternate family building strategy to high

    fertility and sex-specific child mortality10. In his study, he found that couples were maintaining alow fertility rate by using contraceptives and achieving the ideal family composition by

    exploiting reproductive technologies. He concludes: These family composition strategies limit

    family size and the number of daughters in a family in the context of an urbanizing economydominated by an agricultural ethos and patriarchal ideology.

    Perhaps all this research may be enough to convince us of following things:

    1. The problem of sex-selective abortion is real.

    2. The measurement problems are also real.

    3. There is a tendency to use sensational language and make over-generalizations whenstating the facts. Reasons for this could be one of several:

    a.

    To convince skeptics who don't want to believe that the problem is real.

    b. Such research/language gets easily picked up for publication and wide dissemination

    in the western academy.

    9S. S. Wadley, 1993, Family composition strategies in rural north India. Soc. Sci. Med. 37, 1367-1376.10S. K. Khanna, 1997, Traditions and Reproductive Technology in an Urbanizing North Indian Village, Soc. Sci.

    Med., 44, 171-180.

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    c. Because these writers are genuinely disgusted at this problem that they lose their

    objectivity when presenting and/or analyzing the evidence.

    Some members however consistently chose not to believe any of this evidence, called it

    propaganda, and instead presented the following challenge:

    You have not produced one single example of pending litigation, let aloneconviction, underexisting Indian law. Have you even stopped to consider that if there was, in fact, pending

    litigation or a conviction, it may do more to retard the practice than any number of surveys and

    reports?

    As mentioned earlier there could be several reasons why such personal and sensitive issues are

    not always reported and investigated. As one member commented:

    This latest standard for hard evidence is the existence of litigation, if not a conviction.

    Against whom? The doctor? The in-laws? The mother of the aborted baby? You think given the

    societal constraints that you are well aware of in India, that this is a realistic expectation?

    Sabu M. George11(Visiting Senior Fellow, Center for Women's Development Studies, New

    Delhi, India) presents one kind of litigation evidence:

    In February 2000, I filed a public interest litigation in the Indian SC along with two NGOs,

    CEHAT in Mumbai and MASUM in Pune, against the Union of India and all the State

    Governments for the non-implementation of the Prenatal Diagnostic Techniques Act, 1994(PNDT) and for inclusion of all emerging technologies that can be abused to eliminate girls

    under the purview of the Act. The case is still under consideration, and it is therefore premature

    to discuss its overall impact. Nevertheless, there have been significant developments. The interim

    judgment was delivered on 4 May 2001, and since August 2001 hearings have taken place almostevery month. Following the Court's directives, State Governments have undertaken awareness

    raising on this issue, and the media have been prominently covering the Court proceedings and

    the follow-up

    Already I am aware of challenges in the High Courts of Calcutta, Karnataka, Rajasthan, and

    Kerala.

    To ensure that all ultrasound machines are registered, in December the Court asked the

    manufacturers to provide information on the customers to whom they sold machines over the last

    five years. Over 11,000 names have been provided by different companies as of mid-February2002. In January, the Court asked three professional medical associations to provide lists of all

    members who use machines. Extensive media coverage of the hearings has led to other parties

    joining in our case in the Supreme Court.

    This article talks about a lot of other things including the role of General Electric It is

    reported that the Company [GE-Wipro] has also sold machines to quacks. It seems GE has

    11 This article appeared in the journal, Reproductive Health Matters, 2002, 10(19), pp. 190-192. The entire issue

    was devoted to sex-selection and sex-selective abortion.

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    violated the assurance given by its then CEO Jack Welch, in 1993, that their machines would not

    be used for sex determination, when they first decided to come to India.

    From this research and analysis a picture begins to emerge that the problem is much more

    complex than is usually reported. The reasons for more masculine sex ratios are also perhaps

    much more layered than what are generally reported. But a question that has not been addressedso far is this -- if there is no preference for boys, then why are so many private clinics thatprovide sex-determination services cropping up in every part of India? Why has the cost of these

    services gone down so much, if there is no demand? Somehow I doubt that it is the same reason

    why some pregnant women in the US want to know the sex of their baby -- so they can paint theright color on the baby's nursery walls.

    A Word about Rhetoric

    It was also pointed out that in any conversation about this topic of sex-selective abortion in India,

    there seems to be a tendency to use emotionally loaded terms like unborn girls, -- the very

    same choice of words pro-choice people find objectionable in the 'pro-life' camp in the U.S.From the research I have reviewed so far, I admit that I am surprised by some of the language

    used by these researchers (Indian or Western). Here is one quick example of unscholarly and

    sensationalist writing -

    "Once the tests reveal that the fetus is female, it is aborted."

    This sentence appears in the very second paragraph of the paper written by Manju Parikh. If onewere not a critical reader of such a statement, one would assume that this is true for all female

    fetuses in India. Pointing out the link between Eurocentrism, neo-colonial mindset, and the

    egregious use of the phrase female foeticide, one member commented:

    The putative unequal treatment of women is a constant staple of India bashers whether its

    "dowry deaths", widow remarriage, sati, bride burning and now the latest "whine & cheese" fad

    -female foeticideKilling female babies" is precisely the type of emotive terminology used bythe Moral Majority brigade. This merely obfuscates the discussion.

    We can agree that the language used by many people writing about sex-selective abortion andthe interests of agencies funding such research are part of the problem. But by the same token,

    anyone who brings up the standard terminology such as India-bashing, neocolonialism,

    Eurocentricism, etc. to refer to any piece of evidence or analysis on this complex topic could also

    be seen as avoiding the real issue. It suggests that if one is genuinely concerned about genderinequality, which can be manifested in such abhorrent practices as sex-selective abortion (even if

    it is happening rarely, it is still a problem, regardless of whether it is in India, China, or the US),

    one could be easily put in this category of neo-colonialist, brown (mem)sahib, Eurocentric, etc.

    Thus any meaningful debate about this issue has to take place beyond the field of usual rhetoricwars. As one member commented:

    So while I dont mind (Western or Indian) researchers turning the arc lights full beam on socialinjustices in India, I draw the line at the slightest hint of the holier than thou in these

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    studies...such studies are liable to miss the whole point about what is universal in human

    attitudes that makes social behavior like racism and misogyny universal. That it is universal is

    not in dispute --but that does not mean it should justify our collective apathy towards it...

    To discuss sensible and implementable solutions to a social crime, we must first admit to its

    gravity instead of escaping into the bluster of calling it Eurocentric exaggeration or Indiabashing.

    Another member shared this heartwarming story to remind us that regardless of whether we have

    any hard evidence, perhaps the key issue at stake is life itself. In her words:

    I am reminded of an old story where a young child walked by the beach with her father where

    there were thousands of star fish which had come ashore and lay deadThe child picked up one

    star fish which lay gasping for breath into the sea Does it matter? Thousands die anyway,said the father. The child replied, It mattered to that one fish Dad. I saved its life and it made

    the difference. Perhaps we can't change the world, but by raising awareness we can make a

    difference in at least a few.

    So, do numbers really matter?

    As one member reminded: Either numbers matter for all nations or they matter for none. It is aquestion of fairness, balance and consistency.

    Locating Indian Missing Women in Global Gender-gap

    If [sex ratios] were really a long term social/ structural problemin India, then India would

    have ceased to exist millennia ago - even a drop of one female per thousand males per yearmeans that India would be down to 0 females per 1000 males in a 1000 years i.e. no more

    Indians and no more India. As we all know, Indians are doing just fine, thank you very much, at

    least in sheer numbers.

    This is how one member brushes aside the concern about recently observed increasing gender

    gap in Indian census. He then presented the following trends12to suggest that a quick glance atthis should put Indian statistics in a larger context:

    Country Sex-ratio

    (males per

    100 females)

    Country Sex-ratio

    (males per

    100 females)

    United Arab Emirates 195 Iran 105

    Bahrain 135 New Caledonia 105

    Saudi Arabia 115 Dominican Republic 103

    Oman 113 Iraq 103

    Samoa 111 Malaysia 103

    12Source: http://www.un.org/esa/population/publications/wpp2000/annex-tables.pdf

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    Papua New Guinea 109 Occupied

    Palestinian Territory

    103

    Jordan 108 Syrian Arab

    Republic

    103

    Libyan 108 Algeria 103

    Afghanistan 107 Costa Rica 103Bangladesh 106 Niger 102

    China 106 Nigeria 102

    India 106 Panama 102

    Pakistan 106 Paraguay 102

    Sri Lanka 106 Tunisia 102

    Albania 105 Turkey 102

    Cte dIvoire 105 Bhutan 102

    Nepal 105 Guatemala 102

    It was also pointed out that in countries where the sex ratio is skewed significantly the other way

    i.e. less than 95 boys to every 100 girls, should that be considered a case of male feticide? As amember asked rather sharply: or does this not count because of wrong gender?

    One member made the comment:

    If animal populations even out very accurately, I would think human populations should break

    even too, give or take 10 %. Although I have read someplace that in the most natural selectionhumans have slightly lesser males than females, about 5% to 10% lesser. If you notice the figures

    [on the UN website cited earlier], the Western, First World and European-dominated countries

    follow this pattern roughly while Eastern, Mid-eastern, African countries have slightly more

    males. I dont know if it is to do with race.

    To this another member responded, Actually,it does. The western "races" fought two major

    wars before 1950 with the US being further involved in Korea and Vietnam. The number of maledeaths in WWII alone was approximately 40 million and accounts for the sex ratio favoring

    females in the West.13He reminded us that another fact rarely mentioned in this debate is the

    biological side - that the secondary sex ratio (defined as sex ratio at birth) in humans is typicallyaround 105 males per 100 females. This means that the Indian and Chinese numbers at 106

    males per 100 females are much more normal than those of most other countries.

    In animals that reproduce via sex there is an equal birth (secondary sex ratio) of one hundred

    males to one hundred females (100:100) which serves to maintain the balance between males

    13Evidence from Germany over the last century showed significant increases in the male: female sex ratio during

    and immediately after the two world wars. For some other explanations for the observed sex ratios at birth in the

    first world, see: Piet Hein Jongbloet, Gerhard A. Zielhuis, Hans M.M. Groenewoud, and Pieternel C.M. Pasker-de

    Jong, The Secular Trends in Male:Female Ratio at Birth in Postwar Industrialized Countries, Environmental Health

    Perspectives Volume 109, Number 7, July 2001 Abstract available at:

    http://ehpnet1.niehs.nih.gov/docs/2001/109p749-752jongbloet/abstract.html

    Also see: http://www.pmac.net/rachels2.htm

    http://ehpnet1.niehs.nih.gov/docs/2001/109p749-752jongbloet/abstract.htmlhttp://ehpnet1.niehs.nih.gov/docs/2001/109p749-752jongbloet/abstract.htmlhttp://ehpnet1.niehs.nih.gov/docs/2001/109p749-752jongbloet/abstract.html
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    and females in the population; in humans the secondary sex ratio is one hundred and five males

    to one hundred females (105:100). It also appears that the human sex ratio is prone to

    fluctuations; one well documented example is the increased number of male births recorded

    during and after the first and second world wars, among the populations of those countriesdirectly involved in the conflict (MacMahon and Pugh, 1954). Given that the number of X and Y

    bearing spermatozoa from a male are equal, and therefore should result in an equal sex ratio,how can these effects in the human populations be explained?14

    So, there are complex and poorly understood reasons for variations in sex ratio but one thing is

    for sure - it has happened throughout human history in all societies at various times. Therefore tosimplistically attribute ALL of the sex ratio gap solely to female feticide is ethically and

    scientifically wrong. It tells only a very small part of the story.

    Given that a lot of discourse on female infanticide and feticide in India is based on the juvenilesex ratios, we were also presented with the evidence showing that the US sex ratio for ages 14

    and below shows a clear preference for boys over girls. Moreover, this trend is moving markedly

    in favor of boys

    15

    :

    Year: 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

    # of

    girls/1000boys:

    964 967 962 956 953 953

    A member analyzed the above evidence as follows:

    Question: How is this possible over a period of 50 yrs? Are girls being aborted more frequently

    than boys?

    Analysis: Does this have something to do with the sports crazy culture of the US that values boys

    more than girls? After all, a boy trained in professional sports from an early age (a form of childlabour) will pay handsome dividends to the family down the line.

    You see how easy it is? Sounds very plausible to me.

    While our research led us to discover how much is written about gender-gap in India, it would be

    instructive to do some research to find just how much has been written in scholarly literature andmass media about sex ratios in other countries. What kind of social, cultural and economic

    causes have been held responsible for these sex ratios in these countries? That would further put

    things in a larger context.

    One member of the group agreed that it was unfair not to apply equal concern about a gender-

    gap wherever it exists, yet consider the socio-economic factors and cultural context, instead of

    applying blanket judgments and solutions. She explained:

    14The quote is from a book review of Maternal Personality, Evolution and the Sex Ratio: Do Mothers Control the

    Sex of the Infant? by Valerie J. Grant (1998, Routledge). Available at: http://human-nature.com/nibbs/02/grant.html15Source: http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0800439.html

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    It has been argued that in theIndian context, selective abortions are used as an alternative to

    multiple births, the burden of dowry, and the social pressures a girl child may bring to some

    families. Lets say similar burdens were shown to exist in the U.S. and that selective abortionwas being looked upon as a GOOD alternative for women facing these burdens. Would I call this

    a social problem? Unequivocally, yes. Would I consider counter-education, incentives, orperhaps restrictions on selective abortions? Yes, but I would probably find myself against thelatter for other reasons.

    To her, the problem with sex selection is not the gender gap it causes, but the social inequity itreflects:

    Suppose the reason for the gender gap was that there was something accidentally in the water

    which caused women to deliver more boys than girls, no selection involved. Would I then say thisgap poses a social problem? I don't know what social repercussions are inherent in a gender

    gap, but there must be some. Since I don't know what they are, I cant say whether they are good

    or bad. What I do think is a gender gap could be a part of the perpetuation of a social problem.No matter where, I do think it is a social problem when women are faced with pressure to abort

    based upon something as innocuous as the gender of a child due to extraneous social factors.

    All of this raises important questions about the credibility of mainstream discourse on sex-selective abortion in India. But as one member pointed out:

    [W]e arent talking comparative demography with a nationalistic emphasis here, are we? Thisis really shying away from the real issues, which IMO, are:

    1. Does female foeticide occur in India?

    2. If yes, what are the possible causes (socio-economic, cultural, universal etc) and avenues forintervention? What would be the best form of intervention?

    3. If not, why is the perception that they do, so prevalent both in India and in the West?

    It has often been pointed out that one of the key motivations for sex-selective abortions in India

    is the institution of dowry, which makes girls more of an economic burden than the boys.

    Economically a female child is considered a drain on the family purse (Ramanamma andBambawale, 1980, as cited in Grant, 199816). Looking at the UAE sex ratio of 195 males to 100

    females, one member questioned that statistic giving the reason that in a society that practices

    mehr,perhaps girls are more valued. But another member quickly pointed out:

    We may all be so conditioned to believe that dowry = female abortions that automatically

    assumed that the mehr system would have the opposite impact i.e. girls would be more valued. It

    was therefore a shock for her to see that the very societies where mehr is practiced also have the

    most atrocious sex ratios against femalesWhat do we conclude: Either there is no link withmehr but only with dowry? Or that the link with dowry is incorrect?

    16Maternal Personality, Evolution and the Sex Ratio: Do Mothers Control the Sex of the Infant? by Valerie J. Grant

    (1998, Routledge).

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    The situation is perhaps much more complicated than simply saying that girls are valued because

    of mehr. One has to really be familiar with UAE societys attitudes towards girls and the role of

    mehrsystem before making any relevant analysis. But the above exchange does raise a good

    point about the link between dowry and sex ratio in India. But in a discussion about

    understanding the reasons behind sex ratios in India, do we really need to investigate the causesbehind UAE sex ratios?

    One member asked this question:

    By citing societies/cultures where women get money in marriage (instead of having to give it)

    and where the sex ratio is lower than ours and then making the argument that therefore dowry

    has nothing to do with the sex-ratio is comparing apples and oranges. I dont see how that

    logical leap is being made.

    Another member responded:

    When seeking explanations of human behavior, it is quite logical to compare human

    motivations across societies and cultures. The practice of exchanging financial or other assets at

    the time of marriage is a universal, time-honored phenomenon. Just the outward expression of it

    will differ across time, place and cultures. Both dowry and mehr are outward, context specificexpressions of a universal phenomenon. It would be negligent, and downright poor scholarship,

    not to include both in the overall picture.

    All the above discussion still leaves out several un-addressed questions. How do we explain the

    availability of sex-determination services in almost all of India including small villages? If we

    haven't been able to prove that sex-selective abortions are really taking place, we have also not

    been able to prove that sex-selective abortions are NOT taking place. Biological explanationsthough add a layer to the debate, but do not necessarily prove that biology is the only reason

    behind observed sex ratios in India. Are we ready to admit that there is actually no preference for

    boys in India?

    The question is not whether the preference for boys is wrong, but if it is okay to go to such extent

    to abort a fetus after finding out that it is a girl. First of all, these abortions take place later in thepregnancy, so there is always a risk to the woman. Secondly, the only reason these fetuses get

    aborted is because they would have been girls. Is it wrong? I don't know, but I sure know that if

    these fetuses were boys, they wouldnt be aborted.

    Abortion: Sex-Selective or Otherwise

    Another way to understand the issue of sex-selective abortion is to situate it within the largerdebate on abortion. One member provided some important insights:

    Does identifying with pro-life mean that no abortion is an acceptable? Personally, I cannotrelate to the opposition of pro-life and pro-choice, since I am both; I feel all life is sacred

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    including the mothers. Nor am I confident it is better for children to be born to parents who are

    not set to love and care for them. Yes, I also feel this way about aborting females, but more

    importantly I wonder why we should be resigned to that situation. The standards to which I

    would hold myself are not necessarily the best ones for everyone's lives. I would rather concernmyself with giving women better options to abortion than denying them the choice.

    The legality of abortion at the various stages of pregnancy obviously varies according topredominant beliefs from country to country. Should the limit also vary according to the

    motivations? I tend to agree that it makes sense to apply the same standard to all types of

    abortion; it becomes too arbitrary to legalize abortion for some reasons but not for others.

    While many of us agreed that abortion is a very personal issue, and none of us can ever judge

    others' choices and decisions, but why should it be okay for anyone to abort a fetus just because

    it is a female? A member asked the question if women are aborting females JUST because theyare female. She explained:

    Aren't they really aborting them because they will be a burden or because they want an heir orbecause they want their in-laws approval? The fact that the baby is female is the reason for the

    burden or the disapproval, but is not in isolation of the reason for the abortion. Is it valid to have

    an abortion because of burden or approval? Is it valid to have an abortion in order to keep the

    approval of your superiors at work and not lose the competitive advantage in your career? Somewomen have abortions for the sake of their careers, why not for the sake of their in-laws? If it is

    valid to not want a child at all (either a girl or a boy), then why is it unacceptable not to want a

    girl in particular? Is it valid to not want a child because of the expense? Some women haveabortions because they want to save their money for retirement rather than another college fund,

    why not because they do not want to save for dowry? Can we say if your motivation is to not

    spend money on another child that is okay, but if it is because of dowry it is not okay? Is that not

    discriminatory to the poor? In the absence of other alternatives, is it wrong to want to avoid thissituation? I just do not see how we can say your choice to abort is only valid if your motivations

    are such and such. Moreover, I don't think we can talk about selective abortion being

    discriminatory if we mean discriminating against the child. If the child's interests and equalrights are of foremost concern, then abortion is just wrong altogether.

    But isnt sex-selective abortion discriminatory towards women by putting a burden on themwithout considering other remedies? Why do some people demonstrate such a strong resistance

    to considering the burden upon these women, their lack of real choice, and the possibility of

    alternatives? Should we really not care because it is such a personal issue? Should we just stop

    caring about the issue because this issue is so complex, because some bad writing has been donein covering this issue, because we are afraid of neo-colonialist agenda? Why? Because we value

    personal freedom? A member responded:

    I am wondering if the real reason for not caring about the gender gap and selective abortionand the burden upon women is that some people are essentially opposed to abortion, so really

    don't take the consequences seriously. I wonder if there are people who are just more interested

    in seeing an end to abortion rather than an increase in reform or other alternatives. It may be I

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    am missing something else, but I can make no other sense of the resistance to caring about this

    issue.

    Contextualizing sex-selective abortion in the larger debate on abortion raises some good points

    for consideration. But just to make my position clear, I think the problem starts with the

    terminology itself: pro-life vs. pro-choice. Pro-choice people are also pro-life; they just want achoice. People who want to keep abortion legal are not pro-death.

    I also believe that all life is sacred, but at the same time I don't have a moment's hesitation in

    saying that abortion should be a legal choice for anyone wishing to make that choice. There arealso other valid reasons to keep abortion legal - like rape, incest, etc. My problem begins when

    someone is being forced (socially, economically) to abort. I would find it problematic when

    someone I know decides to abort because it would be a problem for her career, or because she

    wants to live a life without any responsibility - but I would want that person to have legalfreedom to make that choice.

    So ultimately these are all personal, emotional decisions. The pain gets enhanced when someoneis forced by any reason to make this choice. I also believe that anyone who chooses abortion

    even as a birth-control measure or as a means to keep her independence or looks will eventually

    have to come to terms with the emotional pain that is caused by these decisions. But I would still

    want them to have that choice. After that, it is between them and their conscience. The question Iwould have regarding sex-selective abortion is this -- do these women or their families who

    choose to abort a fetus because it is female ever feel the same guilt or remorse as they would if

    they had chosen abortion without knowing the sex of the fetus?

    Another member summarized some of this ongoing discussion by asking these questions:

    Indeed, for those that shout about female feticide, the questions are:

    1. If it is wrong to abort a female fetus then should it not be wrong to abort a male fetus? Any

    fetus? Isn't abortion itself wrong? Just to illustrate this point, in one of the first reports citedearlier here, the NGO operating in Mumbai had the following policywe must expose female

    abortions in India but we must be careful. We must never lose sight of our ultimate goal - that of

    promoting abortions as a means of population control in India. This is a shocking statementmade openly in the report.

    2. If it is wrong to abort a female fetus because of social & family pressures in India, then it

    should be just as wrong to abort *any fetus* for social pressures in the West i.e. career, maintainlooks, retirement funds, lack of family support, pressures of single parenthood, forgot to take

    pill, pregnancy failed to snare husband, date rape etc.

    Yes, any abortion is wrong, but that is something between the person who opts for abortion andher sense of morality. I don't think the issue of sex-selective abortion that is based on the reason

    of gender-discrimination alone automatically leads us to say that abortion shouldnt be a choice

    for women. What are we talking about here -- if we don't want people to keep on aborting femalefetuses, women shouldn't even have the choice of abortion? Sounds like double discrimination.

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    Also, the issue of abortion has not been of much dispute in India since its legalization in 1971,

    because it has been considered a part of the governments family planning and population controlprograms.

    It was pointed out that perhaps some of the discussion was getting muddier because people wereperhaps mixing up two distinct paradigms. This member explained:

    1. The woman's right to choose i.e. the pro-abortion position

    2. The rights of the fetus or the baby i.e. the right not to be discriminated against based ongender. This is the anti-abortion position.

    If you choose (1) and the woman has the final say on abortion, then why should we condemn

    Indian women in particular for their decision to abort? Didn't we agree that the woman has thefinal say? Of course, the claim is made that Indian women are coerced by society and family.

    Then the question becomes whether this coercion is any better or worse than that faced by a

    western woman who has to choose abortion for lack of family and social support/ singleparenthood etc. In both cases, society forces women to make context specific choices. As

    asked, why is one worse than another?

    If you choose (2) and the fetus has rights then does this not invalidate (1) in some veryimportant respects? Where do (1) and (2) intersect? Who defines this intersection? How can we

    extend life to some fetuses and not to others? Another reason why the Mumbai NGO whose

    stated objectives include both (1) and (2) seems to me to be speaking out of both sides of theirmouths.

    This is why I said that it is only for the reason of pure discrimination i.e. if pure,

    unadulterated discrimination (for no other reason - not social, not cultural, not economic) canbe proven then the perpetrator should be punished. This should be the acceptable baseline in

    every society.

    The above analysis is relevant only when we situate the sex-selective abortion debate in the

    larger debate on abortion. But why do we need to do that?

    Abortion is legal in India. So anti-choice issue doesnt even arise. Women in India do have a

    choice. Reasons why a woman/couple chooses abortion could be any one or several. Most

    reasonable people will agree that a woman should have the final say in decision regarding

    abortion. (In our group, we spent enough time discussing the ideas of freedom versus making adecision in isolation; personal pain and turmoil the woman/couple goes through etc.)

    With regard to sex-selective abortion discrimination takes place when the only reason for

    abortion is that the fetus is female. Of course it will be difficult to prove that the fetus wasaborted only because of its gender, or because of other reasons, such as controlling family size.

    But then if the abortion were to take place for reasons other than gender of the fetus, why would

    a woman/couple go through a sex-determination test? Why would the abortion not take place assoon as pregnancy has been determined? Why wait?

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    It has been contended that female fetuses are often aborted because of societal pressure. But it is

    obviously possible that a woman may decide to abort her female fetus completely without anypressure, in that case also it is just plain discrimination. (However, I would want to know if that

    woman would have also aborted her male fetus).

    Let us now look at the argument that if abortion is okay for reasons such as career,independence, single parenthood etc., why isnt it okay if abortion is done for the reason that the

    woman feels pressure from society.

    a) When a woman chooses abortion because of reasons other than the sex of the fetus, there is no

    need for sex-determination. So abortion can take place without putting mothers health in danger.

    b) When a woman chooses (or is forced to choose) abortion because of one reason only, viz., sexof the fetus, there is not only gender discrimination but also risk to mother's health as the

    abortion is taking place late in the pregnancy.

    c) In a) there is no discrimination against the fetus, but in b) the discrimination is clear.

    d) In a), the woman making the choice probably feels remorse. But in b) does the woman/family

    feel the same remorse? Answer to this question will tell us about the societal attitude.

    e) In a) the woman's decision (to abort or not to abort) will be same regardless of the sex of the

    fetus. But in b) the decision will be different if the fetus is male.

    By confusing sex-selective abortion with abortion, one is merely trying to say something like this

    we don't want woman to have the right to choose, but if they must have the right, then they

    should also not complain if we keep on asking them to choose female fetuses.

    One member challenged this position when he said:

    We agree that women have the right to choose where ever they happen to live, USA or India.

    Just as we accept and respect abortion decisions made by US women, so we must respect

    abortion decisions made by Indian women. Why would you want to go any deeper than this andanalyze Indian decisions but not those of Western women? Why not have a level playing field?

    Should not both decisions be analyzed? Or none?

    Of course we must respect abortion decisions made by all women - Indian or American. But it isnot a matter of simply analyzing decisions without taking into account the reasons for abortion.

    Let us look at two hypothetical situations.

    1. An American woman who decides to abort because she knows her boyfriend will be adeadbeat father will do so regardless of the gender of the fetus. A decision made by an Indian

    woman in the same circumstance should be analyzed in the same way.

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    2. But if an Indian married woman with 2 kids decides to keep the male fetus despite the fact that

    she has a 9-5 job and her husband is hardly any help at home; but next year decides to abort the

    female fetus is hardly at the same playing field than her counterpart in the US who decides toabort both times soon after finding she is pregnant.

    Is there a difference between the above two situations? A member raised this question:

    How can I see the difference when youve stacked the deck against the Indian female? Why did

    the American woman abort? Was it for reasons of career? If so, I see no difference at all. The

    Indian is prejudiced against female kids while the American is prejudiced against ALL kids -period. Do you see the similarities?

    But lets assume that both the women are in exactly the same situation. The point thatAmerican

    woman is prejudiced against ALL kids makes sense. Reason could be any, including career.Personally, I would find it wrong, very wrong. But it is not about my personal morality or a

    readers personal morality, is it? It is about the woman in question. And I would let her come to

    terms with her decision.

    However, it is important to ask whether or not people see that the Indian woman in this

    hypothetical case is prejudiced only against female kids because of something other than career,

    perhaps a belief that having another daughter will be lot more trouble than having a son. Why didshe not abort the male fetus? Why did she wait to find the sex of the fetus before deciding to

    abort? If career was her reason to abort, why did she not abort the male fetus as well?

    None of us have a right to pass any judgment on the womans decision. In raising a question

    about Indian woman's decision to abort only a female fetus, I am not making a judgment on her

    decision, but on the mindset that forces this woman to abort a female fetus but not a male fetus.

    Likewise, I am also making a judgment on the mindset that forces the American woman to aborta fetus because she is afraid that her high-powered corporate bosses would find her less

    productive/efficient because she is now a mother. So now the question becomes - will this

    career-conscious American woman keep the male fetus because her bosses would approve ofthat? And only abort female fetus? If that is the case, then that is just another example of sex-

    selective abortion. No matter where it happensIndia, USA, UK, or Timbaktoo, it should be

    seen as discrimination.

    But the debate doesnt end here. As a member of our group pointed out:

    Even if I take this example of ....

    1. An Indian woman aborting females only for career reasons

    2. An American woman aborting both males & females for career reasons

    ...things really dont get any clearer. Why? Because after 4 years and assuming a 50/50 mix

    1. The Indian woman aborts 2 females and saves 2 children2. The American woman aborts everything and saves not a single child

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    Which is better? Some people obviously believe that (2) is better? Why?

    However, it is important to pay attention to two things in these examples:

    1. The Indian woman is not aborting the male fetus because of career. She is only aborting thefemale fetus - why?

    2. The American woman is aborting both fetuses because of career BUT WITHOUT FINDING

    OUT THE SEX OF THE FETUS.

    Again, all the fetuses the American woman is aborting are probably aborted in the first few days

    of the pregnancy. This implies prejudice against all fetuses or societal pressures to not have any

    kids. All the fetuses that Indian woman is aborting are aborted ONLY AFTER it has been proventhat the fetus is FEMALE. This implies prejudice against female fetuses or societal pressures to

    not have more girls, though more boys may be welcome.

    I dont find one situation better than the other. But I do find that the first kind of pressure is

    easier to fight than the second one. Why? Because in the first case, for the woman to stop the

    cycle of abortion all she has to do is say -- goodbye career. In the second case, a woman has to

    sayOh no, I could have kept this child if only it were a boy.

    It must be pointed out that despite such intense debate, we didnt hear a single word from anyone

    in defense of sex-selective abortion. Why is that? The debate started with sex selectiveabortion is wrong, it then went to is sex selective abortion really happening? to if some

    people want to maintain that sex-selective abortion is wrong, then they must admit that all

    abortion is wrong. I was getting curious where it would go next. Would it be on the lines of

    let's make contraception full responsibility of women only, so we don't even have to have adebate about abortion. By the looks of where this discussion was going, I could somehow see

    that happening!

    One member brought the issue home with these words:

    To me this is more than just a discussion about the moral propriety of aborting ANY fetus, maleor female. To me sex selective abortion is just one manifestation of the larger negative bias

    against women in Indian society, and one would have to be in deep denial to pretend that it

    didnt exist...

    I know of instances within myown family where the son is singled out for special treatment

    particularly if he has arrived after a series of daughters and the daughters, while given love, are

    definitely in comparison taken more for granted. No need for the men to go into the defensive

    about this topic either -- because, as far as I am concerned, the WORST perpetrators of this biasare the women themselves. Again, I speak from personal experience from living out my formative

    years in India with an experience that spans a small town, two major cities in the North and

    South, and rural southern India. Studies may be invalidated, but not my personal experience. Idid not hallucinate through 28 years of my life...

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    To debate this purely with a view to passing our individual and subjective moral judgement is

    limiting. This is simply one of the symptoms of a deeper cause. How does one address the cause

    and something as deeply ingrained and subtle as a mindset?

    Concluding Thoughts

    One of the many books that I started reading but never finished is titled,May you be the mother

    of a hundred sons: A journey among the women of India, written by Elisabeth Bumiller.Bumiller, a reporter for The Washington Post, spent four years in India, and her observations in

    this book offer insights into the condition of rural Indian women as well as Bombay actresses

    and powerful political figures. On page 124, she writes:

    Although the Bombay women had all of the benefits of modernity, their values remained as

    backward as those of the villagers. Some of them were from families with enough status in the

    community to set an example by reusing to pay any dowry at all, but this option did not occur tothem. It was especially depressing to me that educated women apparently valued themselves so

    little as women that they were willing to prevent a female child, just because she was female,

    from coming into the world. To those women who argued that this was their choice, I would

    counter that choice is not made in a social vacuum, and that their choice had in fact beendetermined for them by thousands of years of prejudice and discrimination. Ultimately, the sex

    test was proof that education and material progress alone cannot alter traditional attitudes. I

    learned that there has to be a place for political action as in the case of the feminist movementto ban the sex test in Bombay that raises peoples consciousness as it tries to change the

    system from outside.

    It is perhaps very easy to attribute such a quote to the Eurocentric, West-centric, Orientalist orneo-colonizing mindset of some Western feminists, whose only goal is to highlight the

    oppressive conditions of women in India, so that they can then make the Western, liberated

    woman look good in comparison. It can also be argued that by pinpointing the prejudicial anddiscriminatory practices in Indian traditions, they are actually making a case for their brand of

    Western liberal feminism as an escape for these oppressed Indian women. Challenging such

    anthropological studies, Narayan17presents a very interesting comparison when she talks abouta hypothetical Indian researcher studying American women. She titles this hypothetical book,

    May you be the loser of hundred pounds: A journey among women of the United States.

    But how do we explain the references to son-preference in Indian folk songs? In a recent article18in Manushi, Krishna gives examples of Bihari folk songs that demonstrate son preference:

    Jo hum janati dhia kokhai janamiha

    Peeyati mirchi jahar ho Mirchi ke jhaare jhooredhia mari jayitiChhoot jayite garhua santaap ho

    17Uma Narayan, 1997, Dislocating cultures: Identities, traditions and third world feminism, Routledge.18Sangeeta Krishna, 2002, Death Wish for Daughters: Son Preference and Daughter Aversion in Bihari Folk Songs,

    Manushi, v. 131.

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    (Had I known that the foetus was that of a girl, I would have had a drink of hot chillis and killed

    not only the foetus but also this life long curse).

    Chandra grahanwa beti sanjahi laagela

    Suraj grahanwa bhinusaar ho,Dhia grahanwa beti janam se laagelaJaane kab ugrin hoyee ho

    (The lunar eclipse occurs at night, the solar in the day. Eclipse brought about by the birth of adaughter lasts forever).

    Bahurani ke ho gayee bitiya

    Khatiya bahire karoSasur sunale ki bitiya bhaili

    Sir se utaar de lein pagadiya

    Khatiya bahiro karo

    (The daughter-in-law has produced a daughter. Throw her cot out of the house. The father-in-law

    should be informed that a girl has been born in the family so that he can remove his turban.)

    Can we honestly say that songs like these have no effect on our individual and collective psyche?

    Can we honestly say that there is no son preference? As Indians living in the diaspora should we

    become so sensitive to how we, our culture, society, and homeland are portrayed in the Westernmedia and academy, that we stop questioning some of the worst practices prevailing in India?

    The purpose of this essay was not to engage in yet another arm-chair activism by Indians

    living in the diaspora on the sensitive topic of sex-selective abortion in India. The objective wasto demonstrate that the issue may be a lot more complex than it appears at first, and to present a

    synthesis of several aspects that may not have been thoroughly discussed in the existing literature

    on this topic. Hopefully, in doing this, we have been able to address some important questionsand ask some more that will be addressed by the readers.