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| Preference for sons is deeply rooted in
many Asian countries for both cultural and economic reasons. |
Preference for sons in
Asia could have severe social consequences, UNFPA studies warn
Prenatal son selection in several Asian countries could result
in severe social consequences – such as a surge in sexual
violence and trafficking of women – in the coming years,
according to new studies commissioned by the United Nations Population
Fund (UNFPA).
As girls and women become outnumbered by men as a result of ultrasound
or amniocentesis to determine the sex of foetuses and abort unwanted
females, more males will be unable to find wives and pressures
to conform and comply will increase, the studies noted.
“Sex ratio imbalances only lead to far-reaching imbalances
in the society at large”, UNFPA Executive Director, Thoraya
Ahmed Obaid said in a statement delivered by Deputy Executive
Director Purnima Mane at the Fourth Asia Pacific Conference on
Reproductive and Sexual Health and Rights held in Hyderabad, India
from 29 to 31 October (see page 4).
“And in response, we must carry forward the message that
every human being is born equal in dignity, worth and human rights.”
Preference for sons is deeply rooted in many Asian countries for
both cultural and economic reasons. If dowries must be paid, daughters
could be viewed as a liability, and older parents typically rely
on their sons for support and to perform last rites or ancestor
worship.
The above-cited studies (available from http://www.unfpa.org/gender/case_studies.htm)
warn that unless Viet Nam and Nepal adopt response measures, they,
too, will face problems similar to those of India and China, the
countries with the most dramatic imbalance between the births
of boys and girls.
In China, 120 males – and up to 130 in several provinces
– were born for every 100 females in 2005, while in India,
the 2001 census revealed that 108 males – and up to 120
in some northern and western areas – were born for every
100 females.
“Viet Nam is in almost the same situation now as China was
10 years ago,” the studies said, adding that the South-East
Asian nation’s sex ratio at birth could become gravely imbalanced
within a decade.
Meanwhile in southern Nepal, researchers found that most people
are aware that they could access ultrasound clinics and abortion
providers in India willing to defy laws prohibiting sex selection.
In both Viet Nam and Nepal, researchers interviewed officials
and held focus groups, concluding that the preference for sons
was pervasive, and that those who wanted to avoid bearing daughters
could do so easily.
Currently in China, the “Care for Girls” programme
which combines public education with practical steps such as bolstering
support for older people could soon be rolled out nationally,
and in India, civil society groups are making great efforts to
raise public awareness and new laws are being codified to slash
discriminatory inheritance rules and curb domestic violence.
Similar initiatives are necessary to stem the tide of the issue
in both Viet Nam and Nepal, the studies said.
(Sources: UNFPA Press Release, 29 October; UN News Centre, 29
October)
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