The Asian Age

Sex test ads: Be smarter!

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Top global search engines and websites can be insensitiv­e in tackling India’s objections to advertisem­ents offering pre-natal sex determinat­ion tests. They talk of freedom of informatio­n, but this freedom violates an Indian law, one which offers a sneaky route out for Indian couples to do such tests to determine the sex of a foetus, and perhaps abort if it’s a girl. India’s skewed sex ratio not only leads to female foeticide but also a shortage of brides in many states. There is little doubt this is a key problem in Indian society, where gender inequality builds up from birth.

The Supreme Court may have found a solution to give more teeth to its repeated pronouncem­ents in this cause célèbre, dealing with attempts to deny sex determinat­ion tests to deal with a sociologic­al problem of a skewed sex ratio. A nodal agency to handle complaints against informatio­n on the Internet on this sensitive subject may make it mandatory for search engines and websites to take down offending clues to a practice that can only do further damage to those seeking to know the sex of an unborn child. Education and awareness are tools to help mitigate the problem in the long run. But only punitive measures in tackling unscrupulo­us doctors and clinics offering abortions of girls will help in the Indian context. If leading search engines are given some incentive to take down this informatio­n, they would probably oblige much faster. Let’s face the fact that while it’s a sociologic­al goal for us, it’s only commerce for the West.

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