Legislation urged to ban gender selection   (China Daily)  Updated: 2006-10-03 06:33  
 A population expert has called on lawmakers to make it a criminal offence to 
identify the sex of an embryo for non-medical purposes and also to outlaw 
abortions that are not medically justified.
 Wei Jinsheng, a researcher with the China Population and Development Research 
Centre, said in an article published in the latest issue of Qiushi (Seeking 
Truth from Facts) magazine that the National People's Congress (NPC) should 
incorporate provisions banning sex selection for non-medical purposes in the 
country's Criminal Law.
 The rising gender imbalance is posing a serious threat to society's smooth 
development, Wei said.
 Statistics indicate that 117 boys are born for every 100 girls in China, well 
above the international average of 107 boys to 104 girls.
 The underlying reason for China's rising gender imbalance is the entrenched 
idea that boys are better than girls. The idea has its origin in rural China 
where farm work prefers men, deemed physically stronger than women. 
 Ultrasound technology allows prospective parents to learn the sex of an 
embryo, which means that they sometimes choose to abort particularly in rural 
areas when the embryo is female.
 Although it has been a rule within the Chinese medical community to not 
divulge to pregnant women their embryos' sex, it has not been instituted as a 
criminal offence. 
 A draft amendment to the Criminal Law submitted to the Standing Committee of 
the NPC for review earlier this year would institute penalties of up to three 
years in jail, probation and fines for those involved in gender identification 
of embryos for non-medical purposes.
 But the provision was later removed because lawmakers were 
divided on the provision. Opponents say it is a woman's right to know her baby's 
sex.  
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