China Gender Imbalance Increases as Sex-Selection Abortions Continue

National   |   Steven Ertelt   |   Sep 27, 2006   |   9:00AM   |   WASHINGTON, DC

China Gender Imbalance Increases as Sex-Selection Abortions Continue Email this article
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by Steven Ertelt
LifeNews.com Editor
September 27
, 2006

Beijing, China (LifeNews.com) — As Chinese people continue to use sex-selection abortions and infanticide to bring only boys into the world, the country’s gender imbalance continues to rise. The sex preference is historical in this Asian nation but it’s exacerbated by family planning policies that prohibit more than one child per family.

A new report from the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences finds that the gender imbalance rose to 121 males were born for every 100 females in 2004. The rate was 117 boys to every 100 girls in 2000.

China instituted the coercive family planning policy in 1979 and Chinese women and families have been the victims of an intense campaign ever since that has involved forced abortions and sterilizations, and the arrest and harassment of those who resist it.

But the policy has caused the gender imbalance to explode.

In 1982, there were 109 boys for every 100 girls in China, but the figures rose to 111 to 100 in 1990 and have been climbing ever since.

Ironically, China distributed ultrasound machines to local clinics on a wide scale after the coercive family planning policy was instituted to ensure women were not pregnant and violating the one-child program.

Knowing they could have just one child, many families, especially those in rural areas, opted to try to have boys to work family farms and pass on the family’s inheritance. That led to a greater use of ultrasound machines as a way to determine whether the unborn baby is a boy or girl.

China has attempted to crack down on this use by prohibiting the ultrasound machines from being used unless medical reasons warrant it. Some clinics have lost their machines and other facilities and doctors have been fined or jailed as a result.

Chinese officials failed in June to approve a ban on sex-selection abortions, but the nation is still planning to continue its crackdown.

In May, the Chinese government closed more than 200 clinics in the province of Hebei that were telling women the sex of their unborn children so they could have abortions of girl babies. The Shanghai Daily said there were 134 boys born for every 100 girls in Hebei.

Officials found 848 cases of sex-selection abortions occurring as a result of the clinics telling of the baby’s gender.

The newspaper reported that 745 hospitals and clinics were involved in the investigation and, in addition to those closed, another 374 were fined. The government opened legal cases against three medical workers involved in arranging illegal abortions.

China’s gender imbalance is far from the normal 103-100 ratio seen in industrialized nations across the globe. The imbalance has given rise to a culture of massive sex-trafficking and the kidnapping of teenagers and young adults to be forced into marriage.

The country has also become a nation of bachelors as Chinese men have problems finding potential wives and starting families. This has contributed to a rise in crime, prostitution, and other problems.

Chinese couples determined to have a son easily get around the new laws as a black market has sprung up of people with ultrasound machines in the trunks of cars or house closets are willing to divulge the sex of an unborn baby for a price.

Some Chinese are selling their girl babies to those seeking girls for their sons. Chinese officials have uncovered massive baby-selling schemes including finding newborns in bags in the back of trucks and on buses on their way to be sold.

The poor parents of unwanted newborn girls sell their babies for a little as $8.