Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Help govt bust sex test centres, get ₹2L reward

- HT Correspond­ent htreporter­s@hindustant­imes.com

This is the best way of making a case against a doctor or technician for a conviction under PCPNDT. Without it, we have to depend on documents that might not result in a conviction always.

A SENIOR DELHI GOVT HEALTH OFFICIAL

NEW DELHI: The Delhi cabinet on Wednesday gave its nod for an incentive scheme for informers and pregnant women who act as decoys and help in cracking down on centres conducting illegal sex determinat­ion tests.

The scheme had been proposed by the government three years ago.

For every successful raid by the government, the person who informed about the unregister­ed ultrasound centre or machine will be paid ₹50,000. If the raid is unsuccessf­ul, there will be no incentive for the informer.

The government has also decided to pay ₹1,50,000 to any pregnant woman who poses as a decoy patient for ‘sting operations’ to nab the centres redhanded. Of the total amount, ₹50,000 would be given immediatel­y after a successful raid and the rest would be paid only after a deposition and submission of statements in the court.

The decoys will be given an incentive of ₹50,000 in case of an unsuccessf­ul raid too in order to compensate for her time and effort.

The decoy would also be awarded a certificat­e by the chief minister at a public function, like Independen­ce Day, annually.

This initiative, the government said, will help improve Delhi’s sex ratio. As of 2016, 902 girl children were born for every 1,000 live births of boys.

Hospitals, nursing homes and diagnostic centres are not allowed to determine and disclose the gender of the foetus to the parents under the Pre-conception, Pre-natal Diagnostic­s Technique (PC-PNDT) Act. A person charged under PC-PNDT may be imprisoned for 3 years and fined ₹10,000. On subsequent offences, the prison term may extend to 5 years and the fine may go up to ₹1 lakh.

The state PC-PNDT cell maintains a record of all the centres and machines in the Delhi that provide ultrasonog­raphy services.

Similar schemes in states like Haryana and Rajasthan have helped in improving conviction rates.

So far, all the raids in Delhi with decoy patients were done in collaborat­ion with Haryana, as Delhi did not have an incentive scheme.

“This is the best way of making a case against a doctor or technician for a conviction under PCPNDT. Without it, we have to depend on documents that might not result in a conviction always,” said an official from Delhi government health department.

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