Steve Fouch

How guilty is the West in the missing millions of girls?

Steve Fouch is CMF Head of Communications. He has worked in community nursing, HIV & AIDS and palliative care. He serves on the International Board of Nurses Christian Fellowship International.
The views expressed do not necessarily reflect those of CMF.

Blogging last week about the impact of sex selective abortion in Asia, I speculated on the cultural and socio-economic factors that were leading families to use ultrasound and other in-utero screening technologies to identify girl children and have them aborted. Little had I (or many of us) realised just how implicated the international aid community and the development priorities of Western governments and the UN were in this appalling practice.

Indeed the UN report about which I was reporting totally sidestepped the issue of its complicity in this situation. But Mara Hvistendahl – science writer and author of the soon to be published book, ‘Unnatural Selection‘ has unearthed disturbing evidence that, far from simply being due to cultural preferences and practices amplified by modern medical technology, sex screening and sex selective abortion was a deliberate population control strategy of UNFPA, IPPF, World Bank and other Western agencies and charities during the sixties and seventies.  In an article published yesterday in Foreign Policy Magazine, she explains how the Malthusian fears of population growth led (mostly male) thinkers in the UN and development agencies to actively promote male gender preference, and to fund sex screening and selective abortion of girls as a way of securing long term population reduction amongst the poor populations of India and other parts of Asia.

Demographers suggest that by 2020, in some parts of India, as many as 10-15% of men will have no female counterpart. The consequence of this is already being seen in trafficking and bride abductions in some countries –  as families desperate to secure brides for their sons resort to quite literally kidnapping potential brides from surrounding communities and nations.

What is most shocking about these allegations is that, if true, organisations that claimed to be supportive of the empowerment of women and the promotion of human rights were deliberately involved in the killing of tens or hundreds of millions of girls in the womb. A total denial of the rights and value of women as human beings.

What is more, it reveals a deeply ingrained racism and fear of the poor on behalf of these bodies.  And this assumption that we must impose our values and beliefs about family size and make-up persist to this day.

Hvistendahl reckons that the shame of being involved with this now highly disgraced strategy has led to a culture of silence about the subject in these institutions – the very ones now being charged with finding solutions to the problems that they in large part helped to create.

This is a scandal that needs further exposure. The story of how the West has, in the name of humanitarianism, denied life to millions of girls, and threatened the wellbeing and human rights of millions more women and girls cannot be left untold.

Posted by Steve Fouch
CMF Head of Allied Professions Ministries

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