"It is most unfortunate that a minister tasked with the responsibility of protecting and advancing the interests of women and especially the girl child has completely failed to recognise the context that sex selection continues unabated and with impunity across the country," said Kirti Singh from All India Democratic Women's Association (AIDWA).
The activists noted the Pre-Conception and Pre-Natal Diagnostic Techniques (PCPNDT) Act, 1994 was formulated to address the manner in which unscrupulous health professionals and corporate profiteers have misused technology and made sex selection into a lucrative business venture.
The Union Minister for Women and Child Development had kicked up a row by suggesting that sex determination test should be made compulsory to track women pregnant with a girl child as a measure to check female foeticide, at a recent function in Rajasthan.
"In my personal view, the woman should be compulsorily told whether it is a boy or girl child whom she is going to give birth to. I am just putting out this idea. It is being discussed though there is no conclusion yet," she had said.
"It is farcical to assume that a government that cannot properly monitor and implement the PCPNDT Act would be in a position to monitor the approximately 2.5 crore pregnancies, which is the average number of children born in the country every year," said Usha Srivastava from National Federation of Indian Women (NFIW).
Bulbul Das from AlI-India Women's Conference (AIWC) said
the 2003 amendments to the 1994 PCPNDT Act recognised the lack of autonomy faced by Indian women and had, therefore, specifically kept the pregnant woman out of the ambit of the Act.
"Now, the new proposal mooted by the minister will lead to a 24-hour surveillance of pregnant women both within the family and by the state authorities. Instead of curtailing sex selection, it will only lead to a greater proliferation of illegal facilities for getting rid of the unwanted female foetuses," Das said.
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