India is the most dangerous place in the world to be born a girl, with girls almost twice as likely as boys to die before reaching the age of five, according to new UN figures. The report, which analyses differences between male and female child mortality rates over the last 40 years, reveals that from 2000 to 2010 there were 56 deaths of boys aged one to five for every 100 deaths of girls. Indian campaigners for the rights of girls said the figures reflected widespread discrimination against girls, ranging from neglect to abuse and killing of unwanted female infants.
The figures, compiled by the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, emerged as India was plunged into introspection over the case of a two-year-old girl fighting for her life in hospital after being abandoned by her family and trafficked between several adults before being beaten, bitten and branded by a 14-year-old girl. The girl, known as Falak, is suffering from severe chest injuries and brain damage and according to her doctors is unlikely to survive the next 48 hours.
Girls are widely regarded as a burden to Indian families who fear the high costs of their weddings and resent spending money on their education only for them later to leave the home to marry. Many women abort pregnancies when they believe they will deliver a girl, often under pressure from their husbands or in-laws who favour boys. Campaigners believe there may have been as many as eight million cases of female foeticide in India over the last decade.
This discrimination has driven India’s sex ratio progressively lower. Census statistics show it fell from 976 girls per 1000 boys in 1961 to 914 in 2011.
Campaigners say the figures hide the cruelty and neglect suffered by girls kept by their families, in particular from malnutrition and denial of medical treatment. Ranjana Kumari of the Council for Social Research said Indian mothers breast feed girls for a far shorter period than they do their sons and feed them less well because they fear good nourishment will speed the advent of puberty and the need for a costly wedding. While boys are taken immediately to hospital, sick girls are kept waiting because their families do not have the same interest in their survival.
“They think they need to feed the boy, but there is less desire for the girl to survive, it is common in rural India. Boys are immediately taken to the doctor, but not the girl. She is the last to get the medicine,” Kumari said. Female infanticide was also a factor in the UN figures, she added. “It has been a practice in central India for a long time, where mothers were made to feed the child with salt to kill the girl child.”
The Daily Telegraph. February 1.
Latest Videos
We select the best of pro-life videos for you and present them here. News, inspiring stories, amazing images of the development of the child in the womb. Let us know what you like and share it with your friends.
Make A Donation
-
Personal Update
Check out the latest issue of Family & Life's Personal Update. No 114 looks at the hype about world population after the birth of baby 7 billion. Maybe it's not the disaster some would like us to think. An Irish bishop gave a brilliant defence of the unborn and family life in a homily. We have the details. Plus a book review of Unplanned, the story of a planned parenthood official who became a pro-life hero. And much, much more...
-
Op Ed | Our Blog
For insightful comment on the latest developments in bioethics, family law, and other issues affecting respect for the dignity of human life.
-
Take Action
Find out what you can do to help build a culture of life. Maybe it's only something small that will take a minute of your time, but it might make a big difference.
-
Events
What's happening around Ireland and further afield. Lectures, debates, marches for life. See what's happening near you and why not go along?
Post new comment