Female
Sterilization: A close look from rural community perspective
By Alma Grace Barla
The news of terrible tragedy of death of rural women who underwent
sterilization in the Bilaspur district of Chhattisgarh has caused anger and
frustration to many people on such barbaric nature of controlling population in
the country. Infact, this news wasn’t a surprise to me, but it left me
traumatized for a couple of days. Some questions kept haunting me like why
women had to pay heavy price while their men too are equally responsible for
the family planning? Why only the rural poor and tribal women are forced to
undergo such sterilization? Is there more population growth in the rural areas
than in the cities?
According to the media reports, so far 14 women have died; out of
which two were from the Baiga tribe. Forceful sterilization of Baiga women is
against the Constitutional Provision which shows deliberate action and utter negligence
by the Government. Baiga community which
comes under Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Group (PVTG) has been adopted by the
President of India for their protection, and are forbidden to do sterilization
as their number is constantly decreasing.
In 2012, during my home visit to the interior village of
Sundargarh district, situated on the border of northwestern Odisha,
Chhattisgarh and Jharkhand, women of my village had similar stories to share.
In a medical camp among the 100 young mothers, some went through sterilization
and some were inserted with Intrauterine Devices (IUDs) or Copper T – one of
the tools of birth control and were sent off with some amount of cash as ‘incentive’.
Few women fell sick due to excess bleeding and were taken to the Govt. hospital
situated about 50-60km away from the camp. It was a Govt. sponsored programme
which was carried out in a mud hut by only one male physician and a nurse from a
Baba Ashram (community health centre affiliated to a Hindu outfit organization).
There was no account of cases of successful operation or how many suffered or
died.
Most of the women told that they did it in fear and constant
pressure from the health workers (they even considered it Govt. order), some
were advised by their family members for monetary benefits and some on their
own will. At the end of the conversation, I could notice a wave of confusion
and anxiety about post-health complications ruling over their faces.
A mother of two children, Nilmanti (25) narrated, after insertion
of Copper-T, how she lost appetite, saw changes in menstrual bleeding, lost
weight, often suffered with fever, abdominal pain and could not go for regular
field work. In the case of Sunita, she developed uterine mussel around the device and had to
be operated on critical condition. There are thousands of women like Nirmanti
and Sunita who have suffered the terrible side-effects of sterilization and use
of IUDs.
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"we have every right to decide when and how many children we want to have" pic: almabarla |
While
six naxalite-affected districts such as Koriya, Dakshin Bastar, Dantewada,
Bijapur, Sukma, Jashpur and Kanker have shown a low decadal growth rate,
sparking off a debate on the reasons behind the decline and even the authenticity
of the Census exercise in these areas show gross violation of human rights
including unethical removal of wombs
to claim money under the Rashtriya Swasthya Bima Yojana (The Hindu), over 70
people losing eyesight in different camps, the green-hunt drive, extra judicial
killings, development induced displacement all amount to
the mass exodus. From the available
information there are no other reasons like an epidemic, scarcity of food or sources
of livelihood and existence as push factors but such govt. policy and action
could be one of the hidden agendas of the Govt. to reduce tribal and rural
population.
Another example could be derived from the Wayanad district of
Kerala, where tribals make up the majority of people attending sterilization camps
contributing to the slow decline of adivasi community and making easier for the
Govt. to acquire their lands for developmental projects. However, this scenario calls for an independent survey, research
study and in-depth analysis.
Various media throw lights on how women 10 times more than men go
through sterilization operations in extremely poor and unhygienic camps, even
though female sterilization is more complicated than men. Recalling my mother’s
testimony and drawing a piece of her wisdom, promotion of alternative methods
like use of traditional anti-fertility herbs would give better solution to
family planning programme in the rural villages. So also our women needed to be
more educated on natural or moral family planning that can help married couples
either to achieve or to avoid pregnancies.
Cover Story Published in Indian Currents, 17 -
23 November, 2014, pgs. 36-3736,
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