Ottawa Citizen

Forgotten roots of India’s mass sterilizat­ion program

Early census drove policy to find way to curb untenable population growth

- TERRENCE MCCOY

We thought the government is running the program for the benefit of the poor, but they have cheated us.

In 1951, a prominent, urbane demographe­r named R.A. Gopalaswam­i set out across rural India on an expedition that, he hoped, would change a country.

Gopalaswam­i, a man with an exceptiona­l grasp of both mathematic­s and language, was attempting India’s first post-independen­ce census.

The numbers he produced were staggering. India had 356 million souls — one-seventh of the world’s population. Nearly three million boys and more than six million girls had married before age 14. He calculated India’s population would grow by 500,000 every year, and the country would need to import millions of tons of grain to meet demand. To break the cycle, Gopalaswam­i urged a practice no country had tried before: mass sterilizat­ion.

“It is nearly as certain as any prediction can be that India’s population will rise to 520 mil- lion by 1981,” he said, according to a 1954 Washington Post article, adding that any plan to get more food wouldn’t be enough. How, he asked, would India feed all these people? Better to sterilize anyone with three children or more.

Gopalaswam­i’s report produced the policy shift that last week brought tragedy: The deaths of 13 young women at a free mass-sterilizat­ion camp in the district of Bilaspur in Chhattisga­rh state. In all, 60 women became sick following the procedure. Thirty women remain in critical condition.

The exact cause of the deaths has not been determined.

Late Wednesday, the doctor who performed the sterilizat­ions, R.K. Gupta, was arrested and charged with attempted culpable homicide and negligence. Authoritie­s accused him of failing to sterilize surgical instrument­s used in the sterilizat­ions. The doctor has professed innocence. “They went back to their villages and went to the village quacks, who gave them antibiotic­s,” he told the New York Times. The vomiting and pain were “all a reaction to these medicines,” he said.

On Friday, it was announced that authoritie­s had arrested the director of a drug-making firm that supplied the clinic. And on Saturday, an Indian health official said a preliminar­y finding suggests a poisonous chemical compound, zinc phosphate, got mixed with the drugs.

Even if the doctor is exonerated of any wrongdoing, the tragedy has exposed what some critics call “horrible” conditions under which sterilizat­ion doctors work.

Gupta, who performed 83 surgeries in six hours — meaning he had spent minutes on each patient — said he was only trying to meet the demands of sterilizat­ion quotas mandated by local authoritie­s.

The case has also raised disturbing questions about sterilizat­ion as policy. Where did the idea of mass sterilizat­ion come from? And has it worked?

The answer lies in the Malthusian politics that pervaded India following the release of Gopalaswam­i’s report, heightened by the fact that the demographe­r’s projection­s turned out to be understate­ments: In 1981, India’s population wasn’t 520 million. It was 683 million. The number of Indians passed the 520 million mark sometime in the late 1960s. Estimates of population growth spiked to 10 million additional people per year. The current population is roughly 1.3 billion.

What happened, in part, was that India learned how to keep people alive. That was illustrate­d in 1961 by journalist Rowland Evans, who described an old man he found in a tiny village outside Calcutta. The man had broken teeth and grey stubble, and he commented on how his life — and lives in the village — had changed.

“When I was a boy,” the man told Evans, “they took away 40 to 50 bodies after a cholera epidemic. It happened every five or 10 years. Now they come and vaccinate our children. I have lived here almost 70 years. The biggest change in my time has been health. We’ve learned how to keep from dying.”

“What is needed is a method which is simple, safe, cheap, effective, acceptable culturally,” the director of the Indian Institute for Population Studies said at the time. “Only one method meets most of the requiremen­ts: sterilizat­ion.” Added M.C. Chagla, a former ambassador to the United States: “Until we develop an oral contracept­ive that works and that we can afford, we must encourage sterilizat­ion ... It must be voluntary, but it must be encouraged.”

But then the voluntary aspect was dropped from the equation. Politician­s went from advocating giving transistor radios to men who submitted to vasectomie­s to a policy of compulsory sterilizat­ion in 1976 — a year when “police literally dragged people in from the fields to the vasectomy table,” one medical officer told the New York Times. In all, more than six million people were sterilized that year, the Times reported, giving rise to violent protests. The backlash meant measures to slow population growth stalled for decades.

Today, programs are voluntary but include incentives.

“We suspect (my daughter-inlaw is) already dead,” Gauri Bai, 54, told the Washington Post after the 27-year-old woman fell sick following the procedure. “We thought the government is running the program for the benefit of the poor, but they have cheated us. We want the guilty to be punished. They have destroyed my family. Who will take care of these little children?”

 ?? PRESS TRUST OF INDIA ?? Dr. R.K. Gupta, centre, who conducted sterilizat­ion procedures which left 13 women dead and 30 in critical condition, is interrogat­ed last week by police in Bilaspur, India. Gupta, charged with culpable homicide and negligence, says he did nothing wrong.
PRESS TRUST OF INDIA Dr. R.K. Gupta, centre, who conducted sterilizat­ion procedures which left 13 women dead and 30 in critical condition, is interrogat­ed last week by police in Bilaspur, India. Gupta, charged with culpable homicide and negligence, says he did nothing wrong.
 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Women who underwent sterilizat­ion surgery receive treatment at District Hospital in Bilaspur, India, last week.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Women who underwent sterilizat­ion surgery receive treatment at District Hospital in Bilaspur, India, last week.

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