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26 Issues L. & Med. 13 (2010-2011)
Female Feticide in India

handle is hein.journals/ilmed26 and id is 17 raw text is: Female Feticide in India
Nehaluddin Ahmad, M.A., LL.B., LL.M., LL.M., LL.D.'
ABSTRACT: Women are murdered all over the world. But in India
a most brutal form of killing females takes place regularly, even
before they have the opportunity to be born. Female feticide - the
selective abortion of female fetuses - is killing upwards of one
million females in India annually with far-ranging and tragic
consequences. In some areas, the sex ratio of females to males
has dropped to less than 8oo:1,ooo. Females not only face
inequality in this culture, they are even denied the right to be
born. Why do so many families selectively abort baby daughters?
In a word: economics. Aborting female fetuses is both practical
and socially acceptable in India.
Female feticide is driven by many factors, but primarily by the
prospect of having to pay a dowry to the future bridegroom of a
daughter. While sons offer security to their families in old age
and can perform the rites for the souls of deceased parents and
ancestors, daughters are perceived as a social and economic
burden. Prenatal sex detection technologies have been misused,
allowing the selective abortions offemale offspring to proliferate.
Legally, however, female feticide is a penal offence.
Although female infanticide has long been committed in
India, feticide is a relatively new practice, emerging concurrently
with the advent of technological advancements in prenatal sex
determination on a large scale in the 199os. While abortion is
legal in India, it is a crime to abort a pregnancy solely because the
fetus is female. Strict laws and penalties are in place for violators.
These laws, however, have not stemmed the tide ofthis abhorrent
practice. This article will discuss the socio-legal conundrum
female feticide presents, as well as the consequences of having
too few women in Indian society.
According to the United Nations, there are, on average, 105 females to
every 100 males in most countries of the world. But this pattern, tellingly,
does not hold in four countries where female infanticide and feticide are still
* Associate Professor of Law, Sultan Sharif Ali Islamic University, Brunei Darussalam,
Adjunct Associate Professor of Law, Multimedia University, Malaysia; M.A., LL.B., LL.M.
(Luck. India), LL.M. (Strathclyde, U.K.), LL.D. (India); Email: ahmadnehal@yahoo.com.

'A

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