'Save your daughters,' Modi tells India

Modi urges doctors to stop performing gender-based abortions, tells people to stop believing boys superior to girls


Afp January 22, 2015
PHOTO: REUTERS

NEW DELHI: Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi implored his country to stop killing unborn girls on Thursday, warning that its growing gender imbalance would have serious consequences.

Modi told a largely female audience in Haryana -- the state with the lowest ratio of female to male births -- that they must resist pressure from family and society to abort girls.

"The prime minister of the country is begging you to save the lives of girls," Modi said as he launched a campaign entitled "Save your daughters, Educate your daughters".

"We have to change our thinking and stop believing that boys are superior to girls.

"We should change our mentality. We have to urgently create a balance in the sex ratio to bring stability or face the consequences."

Modi also urged doctors to stop performing gender-based abortions and instead use their skills to save lives.



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Female foeticide is common in India, particularly in rural areas, where many parents still prefer sons to carry on the family name.

Last year the United Nations warned that the gender imbalance in the country had reached emergency proportions.

The government has identified 100 districts where there are only between 837 and 875 girls born per 1,000 boys, a gender imbalance it deems alarming.

Pre-natal sex determination is illegal in India and carries a sentence of up to five years in prison.

Nevertheless, a 2011 study in the British medical journal The Lancet found that up to 12 million Indian girls had been aborted over the last three decades in India.

COMMENTS (11)

Gp65 | 9 years ago | Reply

@Neighbor:

I am not sure that rapes are mushrooming. Rather, more rapes are reported due to greater sympathy for the victim and less social stigma for the family in the society. Also media extensively reports on rapes and protests against rapes to build pressure on the administration and that is a good thing.

@Ahmed.S: Yes very unfortunately female foeticide is not uncommon but these numbers are guesswork based on the sex ratio in the population via-A-vis what should be able the sex ratio.

Even sex determination is illegal in India , so there can be no authentic figures.

I am glad that the problem is being openly talked about since it needs both policy dimension and social reform.

While clearly this terrible problem exists in India, to a slightly smaller extent it also exists in Pakistan going by its sex ratio.

Sid | 9 years ago | Reply

And mind every intelligent reader here. It is a common practice of every Indian doctor to report to "British medical journal The Lancet " whenever they abort a female child. How else can they get the precise number of 12 million in three decades ??? Hmm ???

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