Community | March 08, 2010 | 11 comments

Gendercide: The worldwide war on baby girls

Image
Trauzer
"XINRAN XUE, a Chinese writer, describes visiting a peasant family in the Yimeng area of Shandong province. The wife was giving birth. “We had scarcely sat down in the kitchen”, she writes (see article), “when we heard a moan of pain from the bedroom next door…The cries from the inner room grew louder—and abruptly stopped. There was a low sob, and then a man’s gruff voice said accusingly: ‘Useless thing!’

“Suddenly, I thought I heard a slight movement in the slops pail behind me,” Miss Xinran remembers. “To my absolute horror, I saw a tiny foot poking out of the pail. The midwife must have dropped that tiny baby alive into the slops pail! I nearly threw myself at it, but the two policemen [who had accompanied me] held my shoulders in a firm grip. ‘Don’t move, you can’t save it, it’s too late.’

“‘But that’s...murder...and you’re the police!’ The little foot was still now. The policemen held on to me for a few more minutes. ‘Doing a baby girl is not a big thing around here,’ [an] older woman said comfortingly. ‘That’s a living child,’ I said in a shaking voice, pointing at the slops pail. ‘It’s not a child,’ she corrected me. ‘It’s a girl baby, and we can’t keep it. Around these parts, you can’t get by without a son. Girl babies don’t count.’”

In January 2010 the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS) showed what can happen to a country when girl babies don’t count. Within ten years, the academy said, one in five young men would be unable to find a bride because of the dearth of young women—a figure unprecedented in a country at peace.

The number is based on the sexual discrepancy among people aged 19 and below. According to CASS, China in 2020 will have 30m-40m more men of this age than young women. For comparison, there are 23m boys below the age of 20 in Germany, France and Britain combined and around 40m American boys and young men. So within ten years, China faces the prospect of having the equivalent of the whole young male population of America, or almost twice that of Europe’s three largest countries, with little prospect of marriage, untethered to a home of their own and without the stake in society that marriage and children provide.

Gendercide—to borrow the title of a 1985 book by Mary Anne Warren—is often seen as an unintended consequence of China’s one-child policy, or as a product of poverty or ignorance. But that cannot be the whole story. The surplus of bachelors—called in China guanggun, or “bare branches”— seems to have accelerated between 1990 and 2005, in ways not obviously linked to the one-child policy, which was introduced in 1979. And, as is becoming clear, the war against baby girls is not confined to China.

Parts of India have sex ratios as skewed as anything in its northern neighbour. Other East Asian countries—South Korea, Singapore and Taiwan—have peculiarly high numbers of male births. So, since the collapse of the Soviet Union, have former communist countries in the Caucasus and the western Balkans. Even subsets of America’s population are following suit, though not the population as a whole.

The real cause, argues Nick Eberstadt, a demographer at the American Enterprise Institute, a think-tank in Washington, DC, is not any country’s particular policy but “the fateful collision between overweening son preference, the use of rapidly spreading prenatal sex-determination technology and declining fertility.” These are global trends. And the selective destruction of baby girls is global, too.

Boys are slightly more likely to die in infancy than girls. To compensate, more boys are born than girls so there will be equal numbers of young men and women at puberty. In all societies that record births, between 103 and 106 boys are normally born for every 100 girls. The ratio has been so stable over time that it appears to be the natural order of things.

That order has changed fundamentally in the past 25 years. In China the sex ratio for the generation born between 1985 and 1989 was 108, already just outside the natural range. For the generation born in 2000-04, it was 124 (ie, 124 boys were born in those years for every 100 girls). According to CASS the ratio today is 123 boys per 100 girls. These rates are biologically impossible without human intervention.

The national averages hide astonishing figures at the provincial level. According to an analysis of Chinese household data carried out in late 2005 and reported in the British Medical Journal*, only one region, Tibet, has a sex ratio within the bounds of nature. Fourteen provinces—mostly in the east and south—have sex ratios at birth of 120 and above, and three have unprecedented levels of more than 130. As CASS says, “the gender imbalance has been growing wider year after year.”

The BMJ study also casts light on one of the puzzles about China’s sexual imbalance. How far has it been exaggerated by the presumed practice of not reporting the birth of baby daughters in the hope of getting another shot at bearing a son? Not much, the authors think. If this explanation were correct, you would expect to find sex ratios falling precipitously as girls who had been hidden at birth start entering the official registers on attending school or the doctor. In fact, there is no such fall. The sex ratio of 15-year-olds in 2005 was not far from the sex ratio at birth in 1990. The implication is that sex-selective abortion, not under-registration of girls, accounts for the excess of boys."

Read the full article (much more to read!) in the link below:

http://www.economist.com/world/international/displaystory.cfm?story_id=15636231&...
  1. groups:
    Community,   News and Politics,   Health,   Women
  2. tags:
    India China Abortion Girls 6 more
  3.     
    |

11 comments // Gendercide: The worldwide war on baby girls

  • Mitu_Khurana
    • 0
      Mitu_Khurana  
    • Image
    • Beginning of December, a program aired on ABC 20/20 about India's deadly secret. It was about 40 million girls who have vanished. All aborted before they could take their first breath. Their crime was that they were girls. As you know the gender ratios is India are terribly skewed about 914 girls per 1,000 boys. In Punjab it is about 833 girls per1,000 boys. Unfortunately this happens amongst the privileged and the educated also. The only woman who has brought cases against her in-laws and husband is Dr Mitu Khurana. Please watch her story and sign her petition for justice. Please give those 40 million girls silenced forever, a voice. Please forward this to as many friends as possible.

      http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/a-mothers-fight-to-save-her-daughters/

      http://gendercide.epetitions.net/

      After you sign the petition, there will be a request from the site for a donation. This donation is totally discretionary and does not in any way or form affect or benefit Dr Mitu Khurana. All she is asking for is your support (signing this petition) so that pressure can be put on the Indian authorities that the whole world is watching them in total disbelief as they make a young mother run around in vain for four years in search of justice

    • 8 days ago
  • eva2
  • Sw3rv
  • Still_Falling
    • 0
      Still_Falling  
    • Nothing surprises me anymore, sad but true.
      You could tell me someone firebombed a nursery full of babies and after fed the corpses to wild dogs and I would not be fazed in the least.

      I would just say - "too bad, shit happens."
      Believe it or not we are all animals; animals with high intellects, but still animals.

      Have you ever seen a cow give birth to a defective calf, then kills it by stomping it to death?
      I would file the behavior of these people underneath the same survival cunstruct.
      The only difference the construct is not one required by survival of a spices, instead one required for economic advancement.

      I know it sounds wrong, but in this situation a female newborn is as useful as a retarded child ..... it serves no purpose, and thus must be terminated.

      These are the rules by which they live, who are we to pass judgement?

    • 1 year ago
  • Almibry
  • csmonut
    • 0
      csmonut  
    • This practice may ultimately be the downfall of the human race. Or at the very least, the people of the nations practicing it.
      Sad times

    • 1 year ago
  • ChunkyCheezes
  • Saladin
    • 0
      Saladin  
    • I read about this in the economist, it really is shocking the callousness, stupidity, selfishness and shortsightedness of these murderers.

      You'd think people would change their customs with the times rather than murder to hold onto a custom that has no merit. This is the danger of authoritarian thinking.

    • 1 year ago
  • imunbalanced
    • 0
      imunbalanced  
    • this is heartbreaking, but an unfortunate reality that must not be overlooked anymore as, "its just the way things are". Makes me fear what will happen to the few young girls once these boys age and in need of a wife. Married off 10 and 12 year olds to compensate?

    • 1 year ago
  • voldypoo
  • Saladin
more from Community:

top videos