WONDER AS MAN FROM UTTAR PRADESH ARRESTED AFTER HE ALLEGEDLY SLASHED HIS WIFE'S STOMACH WITH A SICKLE TO CHECK GENDER OF BABY.
The injured woman was
in intensive care in a hospital in the capital, New Delhi, said police in Budaun district in northern Uttar Pradesh state, following Saturday's attack.
Her brother said the attack took place because the husband wanted
to know the baby's gender. The couple already had five daughters.
"He attacked her with a sickle and ripped her stomach saying
that he wanted to check the gender of the unborn child," the woman's
brother, Golu Singh, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
Police said the baby was stillborn late on Sunday and a man had
been remanded in custody.
He attacked her with a sickle and ripped her stomach saying
that he wanted to check the gender of the unborn child.
Daughters are often
seen as a burden in India, with families having to pay dowries when they marry,
while sons are prized as breadwinners who inherit property and continue the
family name.
Abortions of female fetuses have been banned in India, where the
preference for boys has led to a dwindling number of girls.
Female foeticide
Around 15.8 million girls went missing in India due to prenatal
sex selection between 1990 and 2018, according to the Population Research
Institute.
According to a government survey released in July, India's gender
ratio, or the number of females per 1,000 males, was 896 between 2015 and 2017,
down from 898 in 2014-2016 and 900 in 2013-2015.
Indian law bans doctors and health workers from sharing an unborn
child's sex with the parents, or carrying out tests to determine the child's
gender, and only registered medical practitioners are allowed to perform
abortions.
But activists say gender discrimination and female foeticide
remains a huge problem across India.
A 2011 study by British medical journal The Lancet found up to 12
million female foetuses were aborted in India in the previous three decades.
In 2014, a United Nations report said the dwindling number of
girls in India had reached "emergency proportions" and was
contributing to crimes against women.
Sources: Queensvibe
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