Disappearing Girls Before They Are Born & After They Arrive: A 2011 ALL-INDIA Encounter Against Female Innocents
Welcome to the Girl Murder Club: Parents in J&K kill their girl fetuses and infants like in every state in India.
In Census India 2011, in the age range 0-6, for every 1,000 boys counted in India, there are 914 girls, down from a ratio of 1,000 to 927 in 2001, and the lowest recorded female sex ratio at birth since Independence. Indian parents are murdering their girls, including in J&K. It's called female foeticide, it's called selective abortion, call it what you will, it's murder most foul, in the vast majority of instances.
In fact,Indian census data gathering system on this point is deficient, because India does not collect data on live births by sex. The Indian patriarchs in the PMO and the Sansad therefore prefer to collude and be complicit in the Indian societal criminal hypocrisy value-system and they prefer to collude in hiding rising girl murder data, from public scrutiny.
Pakistan reportedly does much better than India on ages 0-6 sex ratio, as reportedly do Nigeria and Saudi Arabia, their sex ratio numbers need to be verified.
Indian PATRIARCHY combines with post-feudal agrarian and urban nexus economics and lax criminal law penalties to consistently produce fewer girls than boys in our structurally flawed Civil Society and Democracy.
Only China, a totalitarian nation-state with limited human rights (and Armenia, where correlational data is still forthcoming) are worse than India -- China's one-child policy and sweatshop-nation-to-the-world trajectory of economic growth vs human development has resulted in a worse 2010 sex ratio: 1000 girls for every 1180 boys.
China takes the Girl Murder Gold Medal, India takes Silver. Ok, China and India, play the national anthems of these two Economic Titans as they take a
victory lap around a mountain of female fetuses and dead baby girls.
In China and India, girls lose even before they are born. Shame on China, shame on India, ***shame on both their governments and their PEOPLE***.
Kerala, a much touted model for female empowerment, is not really an exception to the rule of fetal and girl murder.
The 2011 sex ratio in the 0-6 age range in Kerala is 959 girls for every 1000 boys. In 2001, there were 960 female children for every 1,000 male children in the 0-6 age group.
Again, fewer girls are allowed to be born in Kerala just like every place else throughout India.
However once girls are permitted to be born, they have a better chance of surviving in Kerala than anywhere else in India.
Kerala's matrilineal family structures, land and property rights reform, universal healthcare including maternal and child care at the Primary Health Center (PHC) level, girls' and women's education, female paid employment both inside and outside the home and overseas, have combined to produce a sex ratio of 1084 females to every 1000 males in 2011. This is an improvement over the sex ration in 2001 Census which counted 1058 females for every 1000 males.
Girls are murdered because girls are undervalued and even degraded in Indian patriarchy.
Females are murdered because the patriarchal power system favors and rewards males in property rights and land ownership rights, dowry, marriage and marital rights including marital female rape, funeral rites and other customary societal obligations of families and communities.
Here's a conversational phrase in Hindi that bears scrutiny: 'beti paraya dhan hoti hai'...meaning ' a daughter is other's wealth'.
A girl is property, therefore not fully a person like a boy, property that belongs to others.
Again that same phrase in Haryanavi: 'chori dusre ka dhan hovai sai'.
Haryana has one of the most severely skewed female sex ratios in the country with 861 girls to every 1000 boys in the 0-6 age range. It is reported that two of Haryana's villages, Behrana and Dhimana, have ages 0-6 sex ratios of 378 and 444 females per 1000 males, respectively. That's gendercide. It's female murder.
***No matter which religion, patriarchy rules society. PATRIARCHY TRUMPS RELIGION, religion is defeated by patriarchy-based inequality and GIRLS LOSE.***
One of the most criminal and disgraceful features of Indian patriarchal power is the ***MILLION PLUS*** missing girls in our population. This is not a statistical aberration, it is a consistent DECADAL phenomenon throughout most parts of India, including J&K.
Girls don't make it out of the womb.
If girls are born they are more likely to die from neglect. malnutrition and murder than boys. Girls are expendable, girls are disposable.
One of the striking aspects of Indian patriarchal girl-child murder in the womb and between the ages of 0-6 is that such criminal activity on the part of parents, usually colluding with relatives, midwives, doctors and ultrasound technicians, goes largely unpunished.
Q.Where are the laws against fetal and neonatal girl murder?
A. None. Parental murder of girl fetuses and infant girls rarely reaches the court system. Girl murder is hushed up in sex selection clinics, maternity hospitals and homes.
There are many more factors that affect the female sex ratio that I have left undiscussed. India's female foeticide and infant girl murder civil society narrative is more complex than I have been able to address here.
One fact remains. Just being female appears to pose a severe liability from the womb onwards, in all parts of India, including J&K.
Wake up PEOPLE.
Girl Power is People Power.
Allow Girls to be Born.
Allow Girls to Survive & Thrive
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Draft Working version awaiting further data:
http://www.risingkashmir.com/news/decline-in-sex-ratio-a-damaging-phenomenon-omar-9901.aspx yesterday
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Disappearing Girls Before They Are Born & After They Arrive: A 2011 Encounter Against Female Innocents
Welcome to the Girl Murder Club: Parents in J&K kill their girl fetuses and infants, like in every state in India.
In Census India 2011, in the age range 0-6, for every 1,000 boys counted in India, there are 914 girls, down from a ratio of 1,000 to 927 in 2001, and now, the lowest recorded female sex ratio at birth since Independence. This means the unpunished crime of girl murder has been around for six decades and counting.
Indian parents, the same ones who visit temples, gurdwaras, mosques, undertake pilgrimages, take vows, make offerings (or not), are murdering their girls.
It's called female foeticide, it's called selective abortion, it's called gendercide, call it what you will, it's murder most foul, in the vast majority of instances.
In fact, Indian census data gathering is (intentionally?) deficient on this particular issue, because our census does not collect data on live births by sex.
The Indian patriarchs in the Sansad therefore prefer to collude and be complicit in Indian societal hypocrisy and they prefer to collude in hiding girl murder from public scrutiny. It is state-sanctioned girl murder since parental murder of girl fetuses, neonates and girl children is not criminalized.
Pakistan reportedly does much better than India on ages 0-6 sex ratio, as reportedly do Nigeria and Saudi Arabia, and their respective sex ratio numbers at birth and in the 0-6 age range need to be verified, before they can be included here.
Indian PATRIARCHY combines with post-feudal agrarian-urban nexus economics and lax criminal law penalties to consistently produce disproportionaly fewer girls than boys in our structurally flawed civil society and democracy.
One of the most criminal and disgraceful features of Indian patriarchal power is the ***millions*** of missing girls in our population. This is not a statistical aberration, it is a consistent phenomenon throughout most parts of India, including J&K.
Only China, a totalitarian nation-state with limited individual human rights (and Armenia in second place, a country case that needs further probing) are worse than India.
China's one-child policy and sweatshop-nation-to-the-world trajectory of economic growth vs human development has resulted in a worse 2010 sex ratio than India: 1000 girls for every 1180 boys.
China takes the Girl Murder Gold Medal, India takes Silver. Ok, China and India, go
ahead, play the national anthems of these two economic titans as they take a
victory lap around an ever-increasing mountain of female fetuses and dead baby girls.
In China and India, girls lose even before they are born. Shame on China, shame on India, ***shame on both their governments and their PEOPLE***. Especially shame on India, because it claims to be a democracy committed to HUMAN RIGHTS.
Q. What about protecting the human rights of female fetuses, neonates and infants?
Kerala, a much touted model for female empowerment, is not an exception to the India-wide rule of fetal, neonatal and infant girl murder.
The 2011 sex ratio in the 0-6 age range in Kerala is 959 girls for every 1000 boys. In 2001, there were 960 female children for every 1,000 male children in the 0-6 age group.
Again, fewer girls are allowed to be born in Kerala just like in every place else throughout India.
However once girls are permitted to be born, they have a better chance of surviving in Kerala than anywhere else in India.
Kerala's traditional matrilineal family structures, land and property rights reform, universal healthcare including maternal and child care at the Primary Health Center (PHC) level, girls' and women's education, female paid employment both inside and outside the home and overseas, have combined to produce a sex ratio of 1084 females to every 1000 males in 2011. This is a significant improvement over the sex ratio in the 2001 Census which counted 1058 females for every 1000 males. But it doesn't change the disheartening 0-6 sex ratio stat in Kerala.
Girls are murdered because girls are undervalued and even degraded in Indian patriarchy.
Females, especially the most vulnerable, are murdered because the patriarchal POWER SYSTEM favors and rewards males in property rights and land ownership rights, dowry, marriage and marital rights including marital female rape, funeral rites and other customary societal obligations of individuals, families and communities.
Here's a conversational phrase in Hindi that bears scrutiny: 'beti paraya dhan hoti hai'...meaning ' a daughter is other's wealth'.
A girl is property, therefore not fully a person like a boy, property that belongs to others.
Again that same phrase in Haryanavi: 'chori dusre ka dhan hovai sai'.
Haryana has one of the most severely skewed female sex ratios in the country with 861 girls to every 1000 boys in the 0-6 age range. It is reported that Two of Haryana's villages, Behrana and Dhimana, have ages 0-6 sex ratios of 378 and 444 per 1000 males, respectively. That's gendercide.
***No matter which religion, patriarchy rules society. Patriarchy trumps religion, religion is defeated by patriarchy-based inequality and girls lose.***
Girls don't make it out of the womb.
If girls are born they are more likely to die from neglect. malnutrition and murder than boys. Girls are expendable, girls are disposable.
One of the striking aspects of girl-child murder in the womb and between the ages of 0-6 is that such criminal activity on the part of parents, usually colluding with relatives, midwives, doctors and ultrasound technicians goes largely unpunished. Parental murder of girl fetuses and infant girls rarely, if ever reaches the court system. Girl murder is hushed up in sex selection clinics, maternity hospitals and homes.
There are many more factors that are implicated in the female sex ratio data that I have left undiscussed and more interrelated societal and political and economic factors certainly need to be discussed.
Our female foeticide and infant girl murder civil society narrative is more complex than I have been able to address here.
Yes we in India need to undertake a PUBLIC conversation on girl murder.
Today, one fact remains. Just being female appears to continue to pose a severe liability from the womb onwards, (with certain intra-national disparities), in all parts of India.
Wake up PEOPLE.
Girl Power is People Power.
Allow Girls to be Born.
Allow Girls to Survive & Thrive
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
http://www.iitrade.ac.in/kmarticle.asp?id=437
WTO copyright
Census 2011: India's population increased by 181 million; child sex ratio worst since independence
Category: Global Economy Sub-category: Indian Economy
Document type: news
31-Mar-2011
Census 2011India's population rose to 1.21 billion people over the last 10 years, an increase of 181 million; however, it is significant to note that the growth has been slower for the first time in nine decades.
According to the provisional Census report, 2011, India's headcount is almost equal to the combined population of the United States, Indonesia, Brazil, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Japan put together.
Interestingly, the addition of 181 million in population during 2001-2011 is slightly lower than the total population of Brazil, the fifth most populous country in the world.
The country's population, accounting for 17.5% of the world's population, comprises 623.7 million males and 586.5 million females. China is the most populous nation of the globe accounting for 19.4% of the total global population. The report said that the population has increased by about 181 million during the decade 2001-2011. In 2011, the growth rate is 17.64%, in contrast to 21.15% in 2001.
The 2001-2011 period is the first decade--with the exception of 1911-1921--which has actually added lesser population compared to the previous decade, Registrar General of India and Census Commissioner of India C Chandramauli said in presence of Home Secretary Gopal K Pillai.
Among the states and union territories, Uttar Pradesh is the most populous state with 199 million people and Lakshadweep the least populated at 64,429. Apart from UP, other most populous states are - Maharashtra (112.3 million), Bihar (103.8 million), West Bengal (91.3 million) and Andhra Pradesh (84.6 million). The combined population of UP and Maharashtra is more than that of the U.S. Besides Lakshadweep, smallest UTs and states are - Daman and Diu (2,42,911), Dadra and Nagar Haveli (3,42,853), Andaman and Nicobar Islands (7,79,944) and Sikkim (6,07,688).
The highest population density is in Delhi's north-east district (37,346 per sq. km) while the lowest is in Dibang Valley in Arunachal Pradesh (just one per sq. km).
The Census indicated a continuing preference for male children over female children. The latest child sex ratio in is 914 female against 1,000 male-the lowest since Independence. On a positive note, Punjab, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Gujarat, Tamil Nadu, Mizoram and Andaman and Nicobar Islands have recorded an increasing trend in the child sex ratio (0-6 years). The highest child sex ratio is in Mizoram (971 females against 1000 males) and Meghalaya (970). However, Haryana (830), and Punjab (846), despite the improvement, are the bottom two states in 0-6 years' sex ratio.
The total number of children in the age group of 0-6 is 158.8 million - five million less since 2001.
Literacy RateAccording to the data, literates constitute 74% of the total population aged seven and above and illiterates form 26%. The literacy rate has gone up from 64.83% in 2001 to 74.04% in 2011, increase of 9.21%. During 2001-2011, literacy rate of males is 82.14% and of females is 65.46%. In 2001, the male literacy rate was 75.26% and female 53.67%.
Among the states and UTs, literacy rate in Kerala is highest - 93.91%, followed by Lakshadweep (92.28%) while lowest is in Bihar (63.82%) followed by Arunachal Pradesh (66.95%).
Mizoram's two districts - Serchhip (98.76%) and Aizawl (98.50%) have recorded highest literacy rates while Madhya Pradesh's Alirajpur district (37.22%) and Chhattisgarh's Bijapur district (41.58%) recorded lowest literacy rates.
The Census 2011 is the 15th census of India since 1872 and conducted in two phases--house-listing and housing census (April to September 2010) and population enumeration (February 9 to 28, 2011).
The Census covered all 35 states and UTs and cost Rs. 2,200 crore. 27 lakh enumerators were involved in the exercise where 8,000 metric tonnes of paper and 10,500 metric tonnes of material moved.
HIGHLIGHTS
o India's current population -- 1.21 billion
o Increase in population -- 181 million
o India's population as a percentage of world's population -- 17.5%
o Most populous state in India -- Uttar Pradesh
o Least populated among states and Union Territories -- Lakshadweep
o Highest Population Density -- Delhi's North-East District
o Lowest Population Density -- Dibang Valley in Arunachal Pradesh
o Latest child sex ratio -- 914 female against 1000 male
o Highest child sex ratio -- Mizoram
o Lowest child sex ratio --Punjab
o Total literate population (aged seven and above) -- 74%
o Literacy of males -- 82.14%
o Literacy of females -- 65.46%
o State with highest literacy rate -- Kerala
o State with lowest literacy rate -- Bihar
Child Sex Ratio
Image Source: The Wall Street Journal
-------------------------------------------------------
-----------------
Economist copyright
http://www.economist.com/world/international/PrinterFriendly.cfm?story_id=15636231
---------
www.usa.gov
http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/linked.htm
National Vital Statistics System
National Vital Statistics System
About NVSS
Birth Data
Mortality Data
Fetal Death Data
Linked Birth and Infant Death Data
Marriages and Divorces
National Maternal and Infant Health Survey
National Mortality Followback Survey
Publications and Information Products
Listserv
Related Sites
Surveys and Data Collection Systems
Vital Statistics Online
National Death Index
2003 Revisions of the U.S. Standard Vital Certificates
2011 Model Law Revision
NCHS Home
Surveys and Data Collection Systems
National Vital Statistics System
Linked Birth and Infant Death Data
On this Page
Publications
Tabulated Data
Data Collection
Data Processing
Micro-data
Downloadable Data Sets are Available in Two Different Formats
The linked birth and infant death data set is a valuable tool for monitoring and exploring the complex inter-relationships between infant death and risk factors present at birth. In the linked birth and infant death data set the information from the death certificate is linked to the information from the birth certificate for each infant under 1 year of age who dies in the United States, Puerto Rico, The Virgin Islands, and Guam. The purpose of the linkage is to use the many additional variables available from the birth certificate to conduct more detailed analyses of infant mortality patterns. The linked files include information from the birth certificate such as age, race, and Hispanic origin of the parents, birth weight, period of gestation, plurality, prenatal care usage, maternal education, live birth order, marital status, and maternal smoking, linked to information from the death certificate such as age at death and underlying and multiple cause of death.
Publications
Behind International Rankings of Infant Mortality: How the United States Compares with Europe
Recent Trends in Infant Mortality in the United States
Trends in Preterm-Related Infant Mortality by Race and Ethnicity, 1999-2004
Explaining the 2001-2002 Infant Mortality Increase: Data from the Linked Birth/Infant Death Data Set Adobe PDF file [PDF - 1.1 MB]
Infant Mortality Statistics from the Period Linked Birth/Infant Death Data Set
2005 Adobe PDF file [PDF - 744 KB]
2004 Adobe PDF file [PDF 786 KB]
2003 Adobe PDF file [PDF - 685 KB]
2002 Adobe PDF file [PDF - 1.8 MB]
2001 Adobe PDF file [PDF - 1.3 MB]
2000 Adobe PDF file [PDF - 1.4 MB]
1999 Adobe PDF file [PDF - 1.3 MB]
1998 Adobe PDF file [PDF - 1 MB]
1997 Adobe PDF file [PDF - 227 KB]
1996 Adobe PDF file [PDF - 433 KB]
1995 Adobe PDF file [PDF - 252 KB]
Tabulated Data
VitalStats – interactive online data and tables
Data Collection
U.S. Standard Birth Certificate Adobe PDF file [PDF - 83 KB]
U.S. Standard Death Certificate Adobe PDF file [PDF - 187 KB]
Data Processing
Instruction Manuals
International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision (ICD-9)
International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision (ICD-10)
Micro-data
VitalStats – interactive online data and tables
Access to downloadable data sets - Vital Statistics Online
Downloadable Data Sets are Available in Two Different Formats
The linked birth and infant death data set is available in two different formats: period data and birth cohort data. The numerator for the period linked file consists of all infant deaths occuring in a given data year linked to their corresponding birth certiicates, whether the birth occurred in that year or the previous year. The numerator for the birth cohort linked file consists of deaths to infants born in a given year. In both cases, the denominator is all births occurring in the year.
The release of linked file data in two different formats allows NCHS to meet customer demands for more timely linked files while still meeting the needs of data users who prefer the birth cohort format. While the birth cohort format has methodological advantages, it creates substantial delays in data availability, since it is necessary to wait until the close of the following data year to include all infant deaths to the birth cohort. Period linked files are currently available for the 1995-2005 data years. Birth cohort linked files are currently available for the 1983-91, and 1995-2003 data years. Linked files were not produced for the 1992-94 data years. Beginning with 1995 data, the period linked file is the basis for all official NCHS linked file statistics (except for special cohort studies).
Related Links
Live Birth Data
Mortality Data
Fetal Death Data
Links to State Health Departments
Reproductive Links
National Vital Statistics System logo
Contact Us:
Division of Vital Statistics
National Center for Health Statistics
3311 Toledo Rd
Hyattsville, MD 20782
1 (800) 232-4636
cdcinfo@cdc.gov
File Formats Help:
Adobe PDF file
How do I view different file formats (PDF, DOC, PPT, MPEG) on this site? double arrows.
Page last updated: November 2, 2009
Page last reviewed: June 2, 2009
Content source: CDC/National Center for Health Statistics
Page maintained by: Office of Information Services
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 1600 Clifton Rd. Atlanta, GA 30333, USA
800-CDC-INFO (800-232-4636) TTY: (888) 232-6348, 24 Hours/Every Day - cdcinfo@cdc.gov
----------------
http://www.commentarymagazine.com/2011/02/27/blowing-the-statistics/
Commentary Magazine copyright
Contentions
Blowing the Statistics
John Steele Gordon 02.27.2011 - 12:45 PM
Charles Blow in his New York Times column yesterday decried the fact that the United States ranks last among 33 developed countries in infant mortality. His solution — prepare to be shocked — is to reverse Republican proposed budget cuts for various government programs that deal with premature-birth and neonatal care. The column, which seems to be a reworked press release from the March of Dimes, contrasts Republican opposition to abortion with that party’s apparent indifference to newborn life, as evidenced by the budget cuts.
But how bad are the statistics really? That’s a good question that would take a lot of statistical horsepower to answer, if it’s even possible to do in a world where many countries quietly cook the books to make themselves look better. But had Mr. Blow dug deep in his research for the column — by, say, clicking on Infant Mortality in Wikipedia — he would have found that, while there is a standard definition of infant mortality from the World Health Organization (voluntary muscle contraction, a heart beat, or attempts to breathe spontaneously), many countries play fast and loose with it. The old Soviet Union, for instance, did not count as live births very premature babies who failed to survive for seven full days. France, the Netherlands, and other European countries don’t count as live births babies who weigh less than 500 grams or had less than 22 weeks of gestation. They are, instead, counted as stillbirths. Japan and Hong Kong, it seems, count babies that are almost a year old when they die as having lived a year and, thus, not an infant mortality.
So perhaps at least part of the reason for the low ranking of the United States with regard to infant mortality is that, in this country, we actually try to save premature and low-birth-weight babies rather than just chalk them up to stillbirths to make our numbers look good.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------