1. Introduction
1. On 6 March 2010, the leading article of the magazine The Economist started like this:
“Imagine you are one half of a young couple expecting your first
child in a fast-growing, poor country. You are part of the new middle
class; your income is rising; you want a small family. But traditional
mores hold sway around you, most important in the preference for
sons over daughters. Perhaps hard physical labour is still needed
for the family to make its living. Perhaps only sons may inherit
land. Perhaps a daughter is deemed to join another family on marriage
and you want someone to care for you when you are old. Perhaps she
needs a dowry. Now imagine that you have had an ultrasound scan;
it costs $12, but you can afford that. The scan says the unborn
child is a girl. You yourself would prefer a boy; the rest of your
family clamours for one. You would never dream of killing a baby
daughter, as they do out in the villages. But an abortion seems
different. What do you do? For millions of couples, the answer is:
abort the daughter; try for a son.”
2. As early as 1990, the Indian economist Amartya Sen first unveiled
the shocking reality behind the gendercide of women with an article
called “More than 100 Million Women are Missing”.
The
article showed that in most of Asia and North Africa, neglect of
women and failure to give them the same attention as men as regards
food, medical care and social assistance resulted in a higher death
rate for women than men.
3. Missing women have grown by millions since then, also due
to the progress of technology which has made it possible for parents
to know in advance the sex of the embryos/foetuses and abort females.
Evidence that this has been happening for decades is clear to everyone:
it is the distorted sex-ratio between boys and girls (the so-called
“skewed sex-ratio”).
4. “At birth, boys outnumber girls everywhere in the world, by
much the same proportion – there are around 105 or 106 male children
for every 100 female children. Just why the biology of reproduction
leads to this result remains a subject of debate. But after birth,
biology seems on the whole to favour women. Considerable research
has shown that if men and women receive similar nutritional ad medical
attention and general health care, women tend to live noticeably
longer than men. Women seem to be, on the whole, more resistant
to disease and in general hardier than men, an advantage they enjoy
not only after they are forty years old but also at the beginning
of life, especially during the months immediately following birth,
and even in the womb. When given the same care as males, females
tend to have better survival rates than males.”
5. The sex ratio at birth is usually expressed as the number
of boys born per 100 girls and, naturally, it is in the range of
105-106 to compensate males’ higher mortality rate. The natural
sex ratio at birth does not vary markedly according to birth order
(first, second or third child).
Distortions
of the sex ratio at birth indicate a deliberate interference.
6. Several countries in the world present distorted sex ratios:
China (113), India (112), South Korea (107), Albania (112), Armenia
(112), Azerbaijan (112) and Georgia (111). In all of them, the number
of baby girls who are born is below the natural sex ratio at birth.
Unfortunately, not all of them have
the same awareness of the problem of prenatal sex selection.
2. Origin, scope and methodology of the
report
7. The origin of this report is a motion for a resolution
tabled by Mr Volontè and others.
The motion defines sex-selective
abortion as a new global trend, due to the combination of the widespread
use of abortion as a means of family planning and the widespread
availability of prenatal sex-determination technology.
8. This report should also be considered as a follow up to
Resolution 1654 (2009) and
Recommendation 1861
(2009) on feminicides
, which
covered feminicides in Europe and, amongst other measures, invited Council
of Europe member states “to consider the inclusion in criminal legislation
of aggravating circumstances where female victims have suffered
violence or been killed because of their gender”.
9. In the present report, I intend to:
- focus on the issue of prenatal sex selection, as suggested
in the original motion, without addressing forms of postnatal selection
which affect women’s chances of survival, such as killing, abandonment, neglect
or lack of equal access to health care and other services;
- expand the scope of the original motion, by covering methods
of sex selection other than abortion.
10. In addition, whereas the original motion mainly mentions non-European
countries, I would like to focus on Europe, as this is the region
with which the Council of Europe is primarily concerned. For this
reason, in preparation of the report, I conducted desk research;
collected information through questionnaires addressed to the parliamentary
delegations of the Council of Europe member states with the most
skewed sex ratios at birth (Albania, Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia);
and carried out a fact-finding visit to Armenia and Georgia from
14 to 17 June 2011.
I
would like to thank the parliamentary delegations of these countries
for their support, assistance and co-operation.
3. Terminology
11. The term “gendercide” used in the original motion
was first used by the philosopher Mary Anne Warren in 1985, in the
book “Gendercide: The Implications of Sex Selection”, drawing an
analogy with the concept of genocide. It is a sex-neutral term,
which refers to the deliberate killing of people belonging to one
sex, by reason of their sex.
12. Mary Anne Warren wrote: “By analogy, gendercide would be the
deliberate extermination of persons of a particular sex (or gender).
Other terms, such as 'gynocide' and 'femicide', have been used to
refer to the wrongful killing of girls and women. But 'gendercide'
is a sex-neutral term, in that the victims may be either male or
female. There is a need for such a sex-neutral term, since sexually
discriminatory killing is just as wrong when the victims happen
to be male. The term also calls attention to the fact that gender
roles have often had lethal consequences, and that these are in
important respects analogous to the lethal consequences of racial, religious,
and class prejudice.”
13. I will also use a sex-neutral expression: “prenatal sex selection”,
which can refer to either sex. However, statistics indicate that,
all over the world, prenatal sex selection mainly affects the female
sex. Although some specific sociological groups have a preference
for girls, this phenomenon is not so statistically relevant as to have
an impact on the sex ratio at birth.
14. Furthermore, I would like to use a terminology which is neutral
as regards the nature of the embryo/foetus and the question of its
right to life. I have decided to do so because my objective is to
shed light on the neglected issue of sex selection in Europe, while
respecting different personal, cultural or religious views as regards
abortion and the concept of life. Irrespective of my personal views
on abortion, I hope that the recourse to a neutral approach will
enable me to propose a position on the issue of prenatal sex selection
which will achieve a broad consensus.
15. By the same token, I have proposed to modify the title of
the report to “Prenatal sex selection”, so as to address prenatal
sex selection irrespective of how it is carried out, as I will not
only address abortion but also preimplantation genetic diagnosis
(PDG) and other potential methods of sex selection. I am pleased
that the Committee on Equal Opportunities for Women and Men accepted
this proposal.
16. Finally, I would like to underscore the links between prenatal
sex selection and violence against women. In line with the neutrality
approach explained above, I will refrain from defining prenatal
sex selection as a form of violence against women as such, because
such a definition would imply that the female foetus is a woman.
17. However, prenatal sex selection finds its roots in discrimination
against women in society; it coexists with and reinforces forms
of gender-based violence against girls and women and perpetuates
gender discrimination. In many countries, women are put under strong
pressure by their families to abort female foetuses, because the
status of women and men in society is unequal, and women are a burden
more than a help. In addition, the demographic imbalance provoked
by sex selection contributes to forms of violence against women,
such as forced prostitution and trafficking for sexual exploitation
or marriage.
4. Methods of prenatal sex selection
18. In the world, the most common and least expensive
method of prenatal sex selection is abortion. However, in recent
years, scientific developments have made it possible to choose the
sex of one’s offspring through other methods. Although some of these
techniques are neither intended for sex selection nor widely available
– also because of their cost – they raise important moral and ethic
questions. It is important to address them in the present report
because they can be used as a method of sex selection.
4.1. The most common methods of sex identification
19. After 1980, the availability of prenatal technology
has grown dramatically: amniocentesis was one of the first technologies
to be used for sex identification but this method is technically
demanding, expensive and performed mostly by medical personnel after
16 weeks of pregnancy.
20. Later, beta ultrasound appeared. It can be used to identify
the sex of the foetus starting at around 16 weeks of pregnancy and
is less technically demanding. It is increasingly offered by non-medical
personnel at low cost: a machine may cost only a few hundred US
dollars and services are often offered at a cost of US$ 15-30.
21. Availability of this technology and its promotion as a tool
for sex selection spread fast, primarily in south and east Asia.
Used in conjunction with abortion it is the most commonly practised
method of sex selection worldwide.
4.2. Development of new sex-identification methods
23. More sophisticated tests have been developed recently using
a finger-prick blood sample. The Journal of the American Medical
Association published a study on 9 August 2011 on these tests, which
can give accurate results seven weeks into the pregnancy (with 95%
accuracy).
The
company, Consumer Genetics, which sells the Pink or Blue test, requires
customers to sign a waiver saying they are not using the test for
the purpose of sex selection.
24. Another type of test analyses hormones in the urine and can
be done at home. While this method has not yet been studied and
evaluated in depth, some independent studies have found it 90% accurate
at 10 weeks of pregnancy.
4.3. Pre-pregnancy sex selection
25. Pre-fertilisation sperm sorting (also called “microsort
technology”) increases the chances of conceiving an embryo of the
preferred sex. It separates the sperm that primarily produce females
(bearing chromosome X) from the sperm that primarily produce males
(Y chromosome). Microsort technology is undergoing a clinical trial
limited to couples who would like to reduce the inheritability and/or
the health impact of sex-linked or sex-limited genetic diseases.
“Preliminary findings indicate that for patients sorting sperm for”
a female embryo, “approximately 9 out of 10 of those who became
pregnant were successful in conceiving a female” embryo; “for those
sorting for” a male embryo, “approximately 3 out of 4 who became
pregnant were successful in conceiving a male” embryo. “The United
States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has not reviewed these results
and has not determined whether microsort technology is safe or effective”.
26. Preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PDG) makes it possible
to identify chromosomes in embryos created by in vitro fertilisation
(IVF), with a view to detecting chromosomic abnormalities. “Only
embryos with the required genetic characteristics are placed in
the woman’s uterus. This could mean choosing embryos of the desired
sex or are known not to be affected by a particular genetic disorder.”
27. In most Council of Europe member states, IVF and PDG are permitted
and regulated by law, under specific terms and circumstances, with
the aim of assisting reproduction in infertility cases or so as
to avoid the transmission of genetic diseases. The testing process
of the PDG, however, can also identify the sex of the embryo, and
could therefore be used by parents wishing to select the sex of
their offspring, for non- medical purposes.
5. Reasons for prenatal sex selection
28. A number of sociological studies have been conducted
to pinpoint the main reasons leading individuals to choose the sex
of their future offspring.
5.1. Son preference and gender inequality
29. Son preference is deeply rooted in a number of societies
and goes hand in hand with a culture of gender inequality and discrimination
against women.
30. Sometimes the underlying reasons for son preference are economic
– when inheritance of property can only pass to the son, for example,
making girls less desirable if parents want to remain on their land
and have some security in their old age. The dowry system and the
related financial hardship of raising girls is also a major factor.
31. There are also cultural reasons for son preference, such as
transmission of family names. Having a son can be seen as a vital
aspect of living up to one’s obligations to the family lineage.
32. Although worldwide son preference prevails, in the United
States a preference for daughters is visible. In her recent book,
Mara Hvistendahl explains that Americans tend to prefer daughters,
thinking they would have calmer behaviour and do better at school.
Boys
are presented by parents seeking sex selection as a source of cultural
anxiety. Preconceptions on how the girl will turn out influence
the decision of the future parents.
5.2. Family balancing
33. Data show that parents having already had two or
three children of the same sex tend to want to choose the sex of
the next child in order to balance the gender composition of their
family (“family balancing”).
While it
is clear in China, India and some European countries that there
is a preference for sons, family balancing does not necessarily
lead to the selection of male embryos/foetuses in the rest of the
world. Wealthy families use newly developed techniques so as to
have a child of the preferred sex, male or female.
5.3. Smaller families
34. Declining fertility and the desire to have small
families may also act as incentives for families to want to choose
the sex of their offspring. Similarly, interacting with deeply-rooted
son preference, the “one child policy” in China is a strong element
which explains skewed birth ratios in this country. In Europe as
well, economic constraints are a push factor for having smaller
families.
5.4. Medical reasons
35. When embryo screening techniques were developed,
their first use was for sex selection. Natalie and Danielle Edwards,
the first children born after preimplantation genetic diagnosis,
were chosen for their sex because their mother carried a genetic
disease affecting only boys.
36. Preimplantation genetic diagnosis can be used to detect muscular
dystrophy and haemophilia, which primarily affect boys.
6. Prenatal sex selection in Asia
37. The phenomenon of prenatal sex selection has reached
huge proportions in some Asian countries, where it has been practised
for decades.
38. In China, preference for sons and the one-child policy have
led to the practice of sex selective abortions and the neglect or
killing of baby girls.
The sex-ratio
was 107 males to 100 females in 1953; it rose from 108 in 1982 to
120 boys per 100 girls in 2005. It is skewed in all regions but
more in rural than urban areas. It also rises for higher birth order
children: in 2005, it was 108 for the first child, 143 for the second
and 156 for the third. The sex ratio at birth is today 113 boys
for 100 girls.
39. This skewed sex ratio has resulted in a huge population imbalance:
“there were 32 million more men under 20 than women” in 2005.
By
2013, one in 10 Chinese men will lack a female counterpart. By the
late 2020’s, a projected one in five men will be surplus.
41. In India, the sex ratio at birth has become progressively
more skewed over the last 100 years and was estimated at 108 in
1950. The 2011 census data found a decline in the number of girls
in the zero-to-six age group, reflecting a steady decline in the
sex ratio at birth. The sex ratio at birth in India is today 112
boys born for 100 girls.
42. The low status of women, the burden of the dowry system and
family pressure, including divorce threats for not giving birth
to a boy, have made Indian women choose not to have daughters or
to neglect them after birth. In the past twenty years, realising
the scale of sex selection, the Indian government has adopted a
series of measures to limit the use of prenatal diagnosis to selected
congenital conditions, prohibit the use of these techniques for
sex determination and outlaw sex-selective abortion.
In
2004, an amendment was introduced to include gender selection at
the pre-conception stage as well.
43. In addition, the Indian government has adopted programmes
to support the birth of girls, such as a contribution to a fund
in the name of the girl (US$ 44, limited to families with low income),
books and uniform allowances, the provision of a bicycle when a
girl reaches the 9th grade. An amendment to the Hindu Succession
Act passed in 2004 makes it possible for daughters to inherit family
property almost on an equal basis with sons.
The
impact of these measures is not yet visible.
44. The imbalance in South Korea reached 116 boys for 100 girls
in the 1990s, with prenatal sex selection traditionally used for
the second and third expected children.
The authorities set up a multifaceted
policy to tackle this problem by organising a “love your daughter”
campaign; introducing laws aimed at combating discrimination against
women; raising the status of women in society by promoting more
balanced participation in public and political life; and improving
access to education for girls. As a result of these measures, in
2007 South Korea succeeded in reducing the skewed sex ratio, successfully
bringing it to 107 boys born for 100 girls.
The
same sex ratio at birth was estimated for 2011.
45. In addition to the measures taken by the authorities, economic
growth and societal changes, including urbanisation and an increasing
desire for smaller families (the number of births dropped to 1 child
per woman), have had an impact on the sex ratio at birth. According
to the UNFPA, “the creation an old-age pension system that enabled
parents to have retirement savings for the old-age, reducing dependence
on male children”
has been
an important factor.
7. Prenatal sex selection in Europe
46. As far as Europe is concerned, according to reliable
estimates for 2011,
the sex ratio at birth is 107 in Andorra,
Bosnia and Herzegovina, Luxembourg, Montenegro, Portugal and Slovenia,
108 in “the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia” and in Kosovo;
109
in San Marino; 111 in Georgia; 112 in Albania, Armenia and Azerbaijan.
For all the other member states it is between 104 and 106.
47. In this report, I have tried to investigate the situation
in the member states with the most skewed sex ratios at birth: Albania,
Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia. For a comparison, I would like
to point out that these four countries indeed present a sex ratio
at birth very close to India’s. However, some demographers such
as Christophe Guilmoto have expressed an interest in researching
the situation in other countries, such as in the Balkans, where
it has been suggested that sex selection might also occur.
7.1. Albania
48. The main international organisations dealing with
population issues conclude that Albania’s skewed sex ratio at birth
(112 according to 2011 estimates) is due to the practice of sex
selective abortions and a strong son preference prevailing in society.
However, little attention has been paid to this phenomenon and information
is rare. Some research seems to indicate that skewed sex ratio at
birth is greater in relatively wealthy families.
49. TheNational Committee
of Medical Ethics is an advisory body to the Minister of Health,
set up by the decision of the Council of Ministers No. 595 (of 21
September 1998). There exists also a professional Association of
Albanian Perinatology. Neither body has issued guidelines on prenatal
sex selection.
50. In the detailed reply that the Albanian authorities have provided
to my questionnaire, they clarify that they do not consider the
skewed birth ratio as a nationwide problem but a sporadic phenomenon
limited to some remote areas.
51. The reply also included results from the survey on abortion
which was conducted in three Albanian districts, in 2009, by the
Albanian Center for Population and Development. The survey was based
on information collected amongst doctors, midwives and women who
had undergone abortion in public maternities and private clinics.
It indicates that the main causes for performing abortions are social
reasons, while sex selection is never mentioned.
52. In addition, since 2009, the Institute of Public Health has
collected national data on abortion in Albania from public and private
institutions with a detailed questionnaire, including questions
on the reasons for performing abortions. According to this source
of information, no abortion is performed for sex selection. During the
second half of 2011, the Ministry of Health together with UNFPA
will start a national in-depth survey on abortions in Albania. Investigating
the causes of abortion will be part of this work.
53. Under the Law No. 8045 of 7 December 1995 “On the voluntary
interruption of pregnancy”,
abortions can
be performed up to the 12th week of pregnancy if a woman states
that the pregnancy causes her psychological and social problems.
Abortions can be performed at any stage during pregnancy in the
case of a foetal defect and when continuation of the pregnancy would
endanger the life or health of the woman, subject to approval by
a commission of three physicians. An abortion may be performed up
to the 22nd week of pregnancy if the pregnancy is the result of
rape or a sex crime or there are “social reasons” for terminating
the pregnancy, subject to approval by a three-member commission
consisting of a physician, a social worker and a lawyer.
54. Records on abortions are to be kept anonymous, and physicians
performing an abortion are required to provide information about
family planning services and advice on contraceptive methods. Advertising
on medicines and products causing abortion is prohibited.
55. Sex selection for medical reasons is not permitted and is
not included in the list of reasons for performing abortion according
to Law No. 8045. Sex selection for non-medical reasons is not permitted
either. However, there are no specific sanctions for breaches of
regulations on prenatal sex selection.
56. Law No. 8876 of 4 April 2002 “For reproductive health” specifies
that during the use of reproductive technologies the sex selection
of the embryo is not permitted, except in cases were there is a
possibility of inherited disease related to sex (Article 37).
57. In general, after performing the prenatal medical check-up,
including an ultrasound examination, on the parents’ request, the
sex of the foetus can be disclosed by the medical doctor.
58. Albania has recently ratified the Council of Europe Convention
on Human Rights and Biomedicine.
7.2. South Caucasus
59. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, Armenia,
Azerbaijan and Georgia witnessed an upsurge in the ratio of boys
to girls: the sex ratios rose from normal levels in 1991 to 110-120
in 2000. In 2009, the sex ratio at birth was 113 in Armenia and
112 in Azerbaijan and Georgia. In Armenia and Georgia, the skewed
sex ratio is particularly acute for the third birth.
60. The rise in the sex ratios at birth occurred simultaneously
in all three countries. Despite the great differences between them
in terms of ethnicity, religion, language and culture, the three
countries share a high abortion rate, characteristic of this region.
61. The same trend cannot be observed in the neighbouring countries:
in Ukraine, the Russian Federation, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan,
Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan the sex ratio at birth has remained substantially
unchanged since 1995.
62. At first, researchers from the Caucasian region did not link
skewed birth ratios to sex selection. The main tentative explanation
put forward was that, with the weakening of administrative capacity
following the demise of the Soviet Union “families had stopped registering
daughters”.
7.2.1. Armenia
63. During the fact-finding visit to Armenia on 16 and
17 June 2011, the issue of sex selection was acknowledged as a problem
in discussions with parliamentarians, doctors, researchers, international organisations
and government officials.
64. An ethics committee of gynaecologists and obstetricians does
not yet exist in Armenia and practitioners acknowledge that such
a committee would be needed.
65. Facts showing a skewed sex ratio were collected, but more
research needs to be done in order to establish the reasons. UNFPA
Armenia is conducting a country-wide research on the topic, which
should be finalised at the end of 2011. UNFPA has already noted
that the increase of the number of births of boys for the third
child started in the early 1990s.
66. According to a representative of the Ministry of Health, the
number of boys reached a peak of 118 for 100 girls for the third
child in 2000, showing a clear preference for boys.
67. Abortion is allowed until the 12th week of pregnancy without
providing a reason, and later for medical reasons.
68. However, doctors and patients stressed the importance of the
attitude of the doctors and radiologists when announcing the sex
of the foetus; they often made negative comments when the foetus
was female. Armenian women giving birth only to daughters face significant
social and family pressure.
69. During the visit, practitioners said that in vitro fertilisation
was not widely used in Armenia.
70. Doctors stated that abdominal ulcer medication is sold freely
in pharmacies and could provoke early deliveries. They expressed
concern that some abortions, which could be related to sex selection,
were carried out at home with this kind of medication.
71. While the authorities and international organisations are
well aware of the issue, Armenian civil society organisations have
not yet started working on awareness-raising programmes on sex selection.
7.2.2. Azerbaijan
72. The authorities of Azerbaijan provided detailed replies
to my questionnaire, highlighting that they are aware of the problem
of skewed sex ratios and that they take it seriously. In Azerbaijan,
the sex ratio at birth is 112 boys for 100 girls.
73. The authorities have taken measures to improve awareness raising
and the provision of information amongst the general public, in
order to prevent the phenomenon.
74. Sex selection for medical reasons is not explicitly permitted,
but there are no legal provisions prohibiting it. There are consequently
no sanctions against prenatal sex selection and there is no body
in charge of monitoring this matter. Furthermore, there is no ethic
body of obstetricians and gynaecologists.
75. A law on reproductive health and bioethics is currently being
drafted, which will contain provisions on prenatal sex selection.
Azerbaijan is also planning to accede to relevant international
instruments, including the Council of Europe Convention on Human
Rights and Biomedicine.
7.2.3. Georgia
76. In their answer to the questionnaire, the Georgian
authorities indicated they were aware of the skewed birth ratios
but did not consider prenatal sex selection a major problem. The
Georgian National Reproductive Health Council confirmed during the
fact-finding visit that neither the public nor the medical society
considered sex-selective abortion to be a serious problem.
77. Abortion is possible until the 12th week of pregnancy without
giving a reason. It is permitted for a medical or a social reason
until the 22nd week of pregnancy.
Researchers
I met during the visit found that in Georgia only a small number
of women aborted after an ultrasound scan after having found out
the sex of the foetus; however, the number was greater for women
who already had two or three daughters.
78. Prenatal sex selection for non-medical reasons is not permitted.
However, there is no specific monitoring of this phenomenon should
it occur. Prenatal sex selection for medical reasons is not prohibited
but, according to the Law on Patients Rights, it is permitted only
for the purpose of the prevention of hereditary diseases. Sex selection
through PDG is allowed in order to prevent genetic diseases.
79. There are no specific sanctions for breaches of the regulation
of prenatal sex selection. However, the physician having performed
it can be subjected to a disciplinary action before his/her professional
Council.
80. I found during the visit that few civil society organisations
are aware of the occurrence of prenatal sex selection in Georgia
and work on prevention activities.
81. Georgia has ratified the Council of Europe Convention on Human
Rights and Biomedicine.
7.3. Immigrant communities
82. In recent years, a few studies have been conducted
on the issue of sex ratios at birth amongst immigrant communities
in western countries, as well as on the reasons behind skewed sex
ratios. It should be pointed out that there are only a limited number
of such studies, and that often their results are not conclusive,
also partly due to the difficulty in collecting reliable data.
83. A study on the 2000 census in the United States has concluded
that immigrants from China, India and South Korea to the United
States had sex ratios at birth nearly as skewed as those of their
countries of origin, especially for the second (117 boys for 100
girls) and third birth (151 boys if the two first children were
girls).
84. Skewed sex ratios at birth were found “despite the absence
of many of the factors advanced to rationalise son bias in India,
China and Korea, such as China’s one-child policy, high dowry payments
(India), patrilocal marriage patterns (all three countries), or
reliance on children for old age support and physical security”.
In addition, skewed sex ratios appeared to be recent, as they did
not emerge from the data of the 1990 census.
85. A tendency towards a skewed sex ratio has also been found
amongst families of Asian ethnicity living in Quebec, even if researchers
concluded that more elements were necessary to prove that sex selection
was the cause.
86. In Norway, research on the sex ratio at birth in immigrant
communities of Indian and Pakistani origin showed a skewed number
of female births amongst higher birth orders (third, or later) amongst
mothers of Indian origin. The authors of this research concluded
that this sex ratio might reflect an increase in sex-selective abortion,
although the numbers were too small to draw firm conclusions.
87. Similarly, research conducted in England and Wales revealed
a skewed sex ratio at birth amongst Asian-born mothers, especially
for higher birth orders: “Before 1990, sex ratios at birth were
consistently nearly one point lower (104) for the three major Asian
groups in Britain compared with mothers born in Western countries. In
the birth statistics since 1990, we find a four-point increase in
the sex ratio at birth for mothers born in India, attributable particularly
to an increase at higher birth orders, mirroring findings reported
for India. This suggests that sex-selective abortion is occurring
amongst mothers born in India and living in Britain. By contrast,
no significant increase was observed for Pakistan-born and Bangladesh-born
mothers, among whom male preference also exists. It seems that male
preference in different cultures does not necessarily lead to sex-selective
abortion.”
7.4. Commercialisation of prenatal sex-selection services
88. The progress of reproductive technology and the great
disparities in the legal framework applicable to it in different
countries (or lack of legal framework) have spawn a new business
for medical structures offering sex-selection services on the Internet,
and therefore reaching also potential customers in countries where
sex selection is unlawful or strongly regulated.
Amongst
the countries where it is possible for parents to undergo medical
procedures in private facilities and choose the sex of their offspring
are Colombia, Cook Islands, Costa Rica, Côte d’Ivoire, Egypt, Mexico
and the United States.
89. Fertility clinics in the United States have patients from
the United Kingdom, Australia and Canada coming for PGD and make
sex selection a profitable business.
In addition, advertising campaigns
in newspapers and in-flight magazines are targeting Asian-American
communities offering to choose the sex of their offspring.
It should be noted that US clinics
do not have to report to any administration the reasons given by
the parents for choosing a PGD procedure.
8. Consequences of prenatal sex selection
90. So far, sociological research into the consequences
of the demographic imbalance caused by sex selection has been conducted
only for Asian countries. The findings, however, can be considered
of general application.
8.1. Rise in criminality and social unrest
91. “The crime rate has almost doubled in China during
the past 20 years, with stories abounding of bride abduction, the
trafficking of women, rape and prostitution. In 2020, China will
have between 30 and 40 million young men more than young women.
A study of whether these things were connected concluded that they were,
and that higher sex ratios accounted for one-seventh of the rise
in crime.”
92. In South Korea, a significant number of bachelors search for
a bride abroad. In 2008, 11% of marriages were mixed, with a Korean
man marrying a foreign woman most of the time. “This is causing
tensions in a hitherto homogenous society, which is often hostile
to the children of mixed marriages.”
8.2. Rise in human rights violations, including violence
and discrimination against women
93. The gender imbalance is not the only cause, but is
a contributing factor to the increase in trafficking in human beings.
Women are bought and sold, brought
to other countries for sex and marriage due to the lack of women.
According to the US Department of State’s 2011 annual report on
Trafficking in Persons, “the central government of China did not
address the birth limitation policy, which may contribute to a gender
imbalance that experts believe has led to trafficking of women into
involuntary servitude through forced marriage in the Chinese population”.
94. Another possible consequence is an increase in the rate of
women’s suicides: according to the World Health Organisation, female
suicide rates in China are among the highest in the world. In fact,
suicide is the most common form of death amongst Chinese rural women
aged 15-34. Some people think that young women kill themselves because
they cannot live with the knowledge that they have aborted female
foetuses, or in some cases killed their baby girls, or because they
were not able to give birth to a boy.
95. The resurgence of polyandry (one woman married to more than
one man) in some Indian provinces is also considered as connected
to the population imbalance caused by sex selection.
96. The continuation of discrimination against girls and women
by women themselves is also a consequence. Prenatal sex selection
is discrimination in itself and reinforces discrimination.
In
India, many women blamed for having daughters are abandoned or divorced
since they were not able to have a son.
Women
are put “in a position where they must perpetuate the lower status
of girls through son preference”.
9. Prenatal sex selection in international law
9.1. United Nations instruments
98. From a political point of view, it is also worth mentioning
the United Nations interagency statement on preventing gender-biased
sex selection, which was released on 14 June 2011 by the Office
of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, the United Nations Fund
for Population, the United Nations Fund for Children, UN Women and
the World Health Organization.
The
statement stressed the need to collect “more reliable data on the
real magnitude of the problem, on its social and health consequences
and on the impact of interventions”. It also called for the development
of guidelines on the ethical use of relevant technologies, the adoption
of supportive measures for girls and women, the development of legislation
addressing causes of gender inequality and awareness raising on
the issue.
9.2. European instruments
99. The European Convention on Human Rights and Biomedicine
(“Oviedo Convention”), negotiated and opened for signature within
the Council of Europe, is a major international binding instrument
containing a provision on prenatal sex selection.
100. Its Article 14 states “the use of techniques of medically
assisted procreation shall not be allowed for the purpose of choosing
a future child’s sex except where serious hereditary sex-related
disease is to be avoided”.
101. This Convention has been signed and ratified by 28 member
states (Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus,
Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Georgia, Greece, Hungary,
Iceland, Latvia, Lithuania, Moldova, Montenegro, Norway, Portugal,
Romania, San Marino, Serbia, Slovak Republic, Slovenia, Spain, Switzerland,
“The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia” and Turkey.
102. It is a treaty open for signature by the member states of
the Council of Europe, the non-member states which have participated
in its elaboration and the European Union, and for accession by
other non-member states.
103. For the sake of clarity, I should also point out that the
Council of Europe Convention on Preventing and Combating Violence
against Women and Domestic Violence does not explicitly include
prenatal sex selection in its scope of application. However, it
includes psychological violence in Article 33 “Parties shall take
the necessary legislative or other measures to ensure that the intentional
conduct of seriously impairing a person’s psychological integrity
through coercion or threats is criminalised”. The pressure exerted
on women by their husbands and families, forcing them to abort,
can be considered a form of psychological violence.
104. In addition, the Convention condemns the practice of forced
abortions in its Article 39 “Parties shall take the necessary legislative
or other measures to ensure that the following intentional conducts
are criminalised: a) performing an abortion on a woman without her
prior and informed consent; b) performing surgery which has the
purpose or effect of terminating a woman’s capacity to naturally
reproduce without her prior and informed consent or understanding
of the procedure”.
105. The Committee of Ministers has called on member states to
“prohibit enforced sterilisation or abortion, contraception imposed
by coercion or force, and prenatal selection by sex, and take all
necessary measures to this end” in its Recommendation Rec(2002)5
on the protection of women against violence, adopted on 30 April
2002.
106. It is also worth recalling that Article 3 of the Charter of
Fundamental Rights of the European Union (right to the integrity
of the person) prohibits eugenic practices, “in particular those
aiming at the selection of persons”.
10. Prenatal sex selection in national law
10.1. In the context of preimplantation genetic diagnosis
107. As regards preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PDG),
national approaches vary considerably from state to state. Only
a few member states prohibit it in all circumstances (Austria and
Ireland).
108. In Italy, even if the relevant legislation does not expressly
mention PDG,
this
was defined as prohibited according to the interpretation provided
by the ministerial explanatory guidelines. Since a decision of the Constitutional
Court in 2006, however, Italian courts have developed a case law
which affirms the incompatibility of the prohibition of PDG with
the Constitution, provided that it is conducted in compliance with the
law and to detect abnormalities and diseases of the foetus.
109. In the great majority of the other member states (such as
Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Greece, Norway, Portugal, the
Russian Federation, Spain, Sweden, the United Kingdom) PDG is lawful
and regulated by the law. In these cases, however, sex selection
is allowed only for medical reasons.
110. On 7 July 2011, the German parliament passed a law allowing
PGD of embryos after in vitro fertilisation if the parents have
a strong likelihood of passing on a defect or if the chances of
a miscarriage or stillbirth are high for genetic reasons.
10.2. In the context of abortion
111. As regards sex selection through abortion, Sweden
represents an isolated case in Europe. In this country, since 1975,
women have the legal right to abortion during the first 18 weeks
of pregnancy, without having to give a reason. After the 18th week,
an abortion may be performed if there are “special reasons” for doing
so, up to the 22nd week. In these cases, the National Board of Health
and Welfare conducts an investigation and decides whether to allow
the abortion.
112. Recently, the National Board of Health and Welfare was asked
to give its opinion on a specific case and clarify whether medical
staff are obliged to disclose the sex of the foetus even if there
are no medical reasons, and to perform an abortion even when the
sex of the foetus is the only basis for the request. The reply was affirmative.
113. Amongst Council of Europe observer states, Canada is in a
somewhat similar position: sex selection in the context of reproductive
technology is prohibited, subject to an exception that allows sex
selection to prevent disorders or disease.
On
other hand, since 1998 – when a provision of the criminal code on
abortion was found unconstitutional – Canada has not had a law prohibiting
any type of abortion, including abortions for the purpose of sex
selection, although there have been several failed attempts at legislative
reform. Abortion for sex selection is therefore legal and there
are reports that it has been practised.
11. Recommendations by ethics bodies
114. Many ethics bodies and associations have taken position
on the issue of the participation of health-care providers in sex
selection. The overwhelming majority of them discourage prenatal
sex selection unless it is performed for medical reasons. These
are some examples:
- the International
Federation of Gynaecology and Obstetrics rejects sex selection when
it is used as a tool for sex discrimination. It supports preconception
sex selection when it is used to avoid sex-linked genetic disorders;
- the United Kingdom’s Human Fertilisation and Embryology
Authority Code of Practice on preimplantation diagnostic states
that “centres may not use any information derived from tests on
an embryo, or any material removed from it or from the gametes that
produced it, to select embryos of a particular sex for non-medical
reasons”;
- the Swiss Academy for Medical Sciences has drafted guidelines
for genetic testing. Sex selection is considered “inappropriate
if [the] aim is merely to determine the sex of the embryo or foetus
or other factors that do not constitute a threat to health”;
- the American College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists’
Committee on Ethics supports the practice of offering patients procedures
for the purpose of preventing serious sex-linked genetic diseases. However,
the committee opposes meeting requests for sex selection for personal
and family reasons, including family balancing, because of the concern
that such requests may ultimately support sexist practices;
- a partially dissonant voice is the Ethics Committee of
the American Society for Reproductive Medicine, which maintains
that the use of preconception sex selection by preimplantation genetic
diagnosis for non-medical reasons is ethically problematic and should
be discouraged. However, it issued a statement in 2001 that if prefertilisation
techniques, particularly sperm sorting, were demonstrated to be
safe and efficacious, they would be ethically permissible for family
balancing.
115. Despite these guidelines and recommendations, in most cases
the situation faced by health-care providers is not so straightforward:
they may participate unknowingly in sex selection when disclosing information
about the sex of a foetus resulting from a medical procedure performed
for some other purpose.
116. It is possibly for this reason that public hospitals and medical
structures in the United Kingdom normally withhold information about
the sex of the foetus during scans.
117. However, the policy of not announcing the sex of the foetus
depends on the willingness of the doctors to abide by it and existing
sanctions. While ethical guidelines encourage this policy, there
has been no indication to date as to whether this policy has contributed
to preventing sex selection. The availability of tests on the Internet
makes it easier for people to find out the sex of the foetus, whether
this is legal in their country or not.
12. Conclusions and recommendations
118. Gender inequality in all aspects of life and discrimination
against women are so widespread in the world that, spontaneously
or under pressure, millions of women decide not to give birth to
daughters, who are considered human beings of lesser value than
men and a burden for their families.
119. Prenatal sex selection is a serious problem, which can contribute
to a rise in criminality and social instability. It has reached
huge proportions in some Asian countries, especially in China and
India. It has been acknowledged by the authorities, it has been
studied by researchers and is being addressed by policy and legal measures,
although still with unsatisfactory results.
120. Prenatal sex selection also affects some European countries,
sometimes at levels comparable to India. In Europe, however, the
problem has just started to be acknowledged by the authorities;
it has hardly been researched by the scientific community and it
is largely ignored by existing legislation, policies and guidelines in
the field of reproductive health, family planning and assisted parenthood.
121. Preparing this report has given me the possibility to reflect
on the impact of modern technology on women’s rights and status
in society. For decades, women fought the battle to legalise abortion
and to have the freedom to choose whether to become mothers. However,
women did not fight this battle to perpetuate gender inequality,
discrimination against women and gender stereotypes.
122. Unfortunately, in a number of countries which have legalised
abortion, this right is being misused, in conjunction with the availability
of prenatal sex identification, to affect women’s chances of being
born, and to perpetuate a culture of inequality.
123. We should take a stance against prenatal sex selection in
the strongest terms, because of its potential social consequences
and because it perpetuates a culture of gender inequality which
is contrary to human rights and the universal values upheld by the
Council of Europe.
124. We should be careful, however, not to use prenatal sex selection
as a pretext to limit legal abortion. These limitations would have
no impact whatsoever on tackling the root causes of sex selection,
namely gender inequality.
125. Likewise, we should refrain from discriminating between different
methods of sex selection, and from applying double standards according
to the level of income of the individuals involved or the countries
where it takes place.
126. Abortion is the most widespread method of sex selection in
low-income countries and for low-income families. It is not, however,
the only method of sex selection. Especially in relatively rich
countries or amongst wealthy families, there is a risk that new
reproductive technologies are misused for the same purposes.
127. The debate on whether it should be admissible to choose one’s
offspring’s sex opens a number of ethical questions, to which different
individuals reply in different ways. Also countries have replied
in different ways, sometimes contradictory. It was interesting for
me to realise that a country such as Mexico, where the legalisation
on abortion has followed a tortuous and difficult path, permits
sex selection for non-medical reasons with other methods; in Sweden
and Canada there are no grounds to interfere with a woman’s decision to
abort the foetus of the sex that she does not want, while it is
not admissible to select the sex of a foetus in the context of a
PDG procedure, unless there are medical reasons.
128. If our stance against prenatal sex selection is a principled
one, and based on the universal value of equality between women
and men, we should be prepared to be consistent. In my opinion,
prenatal sex selection should be resorted to only to avoid a serious
hereditary sex-related disease, irrespective of the method.
129. The example of South Korea demonstrates that it is possible
to reduce the imbalance in the sex ratio at birth through a combination
of measures. For European countries, the first step should be, without
any doubt, the authorities’ acknowledgement of the existence of
a problem.
130. This should be followed by:
- the organisation of awareness-raising campaigns addressed
to the general public;
- the provision of more specialised training and information
targeting medical staff;
- the encouragement of guidelines from ethics bodies;
- the collection of data on sex ratios at birth at national
level as well as in specific regions;
- when possible, the collection of data on sex ratios at
birth amongst specific communities, while avoiding promoting discriminatory
or stereotyped views on such communities;
- the promotion of scientific research on the root causes
of prenatal sex selection and its social consequences;
- the development of appropriate legislation on prenatal
sex selection;
- the signature and ratification of the European Convention
on Human Rights and Biomedicine.
131. I believe, however, that the most effective and durable way
to prevent prenatal sex selection is promoting the equal value of
women and men in society and their effective equality in all aspects
of life. A lot remains to be done in this area, and I hope that
the Council of Europe will continue to assist its member states
in meeting the challenge.