ICYO
YOUTH INFORMATION
No: 2007/70
(E-Newsletter
from network of youth organizations in India)
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ICYO - Platform of 356 Youth Organizations in India.
ICYO - India’s largest network of urban and rural
youth.
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(Year 2015 to achieve the MDGs)
The lost woman
Three
billion people in the world live on less than $2 a day.
Women, in many cases, must bear a
double burden – one of poverty, and one of the societal beliefs and practices
that reflect the brutal reality of the world. A woman’s life isn’t quite worth
that of a man’s.
According to one United Nations
estimate, 113 to 200 million women are “demographically missing” from the world
today. That is to say, there should be 113 to 200 million more women walking
the earth, who aren’t.
By that same estimate, 1.5 to 3
million women and girls lose their lives every year because of gender-based
neglect or gender-based violence.
You can point a finger at poverty.
But poverty alone does not result in these women’s deaths; the blame also falls
on the attitudes of the societies these women inhabit.
When a family doesn’t have enough
to eat, women will sacrifice their shares for the sakes of their male relatives
– willingly or not. When a poor tenant farmer has an ill son and ill daughter,
but can only afford treatment for one, the son will be taken to the doctor over
the daughter.
These practices can’t necessarily
be quantified, but their effects certainly can. Take South Asia, which includes
India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Afghanistan and Nepal – it accounts for the bulk
of all maternal mortality deaths in the world. Sixty percent of the women of
childbearing age in this part of the world are malnourished.
Often, they are given larger
shares of work, smaller amounts of food, and don’t have control over the most
basic decisions regarding their health care.
In this part of the world alone,
2.3 million babies die preventable deaths every year. Those children would live
if their mothers received better obstetric health care. In glaring contrast,
the U.N. Universal Declaration on Human Rights states that “motherhood and
childhood are entitled to special care and assistance.”
Even more horrific than these
numbers is the number of unborn females that are aborted due to selective sex
abortion and the number of baby girls that become victims of infanticide.
China alone accounts for 50
million of the girls who are “missing” due to these practices. The one child
only policy, coupled with the apparently higher value placed on sons, has
resulted in incredibly skewed gender ratios in many parts of the country. In
some provinces there are 120 to 130 males for every 100 females – the “natural”
ratio is 104. Seven thousand fewer baby girls are born than boys every day in
India.
Imagine the effect that trends
such as these will have on future generations.
I have only mentioned poverty- and
neglect-related deaths along with selective sex abortion and female
infanticide.
Think about the women who become
victims of domestic and sexual violence, human trafficking and the illegal sex
trade, honor killings, dowry deaths and female genital mutilation.
The Universal Declaration of Human
Rights says “everyone has the right to life, liberty and security of person.”
When will the world begin to
ensure these rights?
(Ayesha
Awan | IDS | Date: 10/24/2007)
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(ICYO)
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Indian Committee of Youth Organizations
(ICYO) is the network organization, committed for capacity building and
developing mutual cooperation and understanding amongs youth organizations,
youth groups.
ICYO functions as an umbrella organization
of youth organizations with working area in South Asia.a.
Affiliation:
Consultative (Roster) Status with ECOSOC, United Nations;
Consultative Status with Commission on Sustainable Development;
Full Member of World Assembly of Youth (WAY);
Full Member of Asian Youth Council (AYC);
Member: CRIN, ATSEC-DELHI,
Affiliate group of ECPAT International, Thailand;