| FEMALE
INFANTICIDE
National Foundation for India
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Gender Equity and Justice
The Declaration of 1990 as the SAARC Year of the Girl Child and
the decade as the SAARC Decade of the Girl Child has helped in highlighting
the multiple problems and discrimination faced by the girl child.
The National Foundation for India therefore decided to focus on
this much neglected issue and in the last three years of grant-making
has concentrated its support in this area.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Objectives & Approach a.. prevention with the
ultimate objective of eradicating female infanticide and foeticide
in the most affected areas ;
b.. engendering programmes of grassroots organizations to address
issues to do with the girl child ; providing a positive image of
the girl child ; and
c.. bringing all the agencies working on the girl child into an
informal and formal network
Approach
The Foundation has adopted a four level approach to programming
in the area.
The first level of interventions is at the grassroots level with
local, community based organizations;
The second level of intervention is to initiate projects to build
capacities of NGOs/community based organizations to enable them
to design holistic, engendered, people centered projects ;
The third level of intervention seeks to put in place institutional
mechanisms and facilitate strategic alliances and informal networking
between organizations working on the issue of gender equity;
The fourth level of intervention is an attempt to influence public
opinion/policy through sustained media intervention. The Foundation
administered Media Fellowship programme has been used as a tool
in the past, but other innovative ways of doing the same can be
tried.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SOME NFI PARTNERS
Community Services Guild (CSG), Tamil Nadu
The Community Services Guild (CSG) is an independent voluntary organization
registered in 1975. The focus of its work has been the development
of rural, tribal and urban poor, particularly women and children.
CSG?s approach is holistic to tackle the multiple problems in social,
economic, health, educational and environmental spheres.
Of particular significance has been the organizations work in the
prevention of female infanticide. One of CSG?s most significant
interventions is the Safe Childhood Scheme (1993-2000) spread over
533 villages in three blocks in Salem district.
Female Infanticide
The problem of female infanticide and foeticide came to the limelight
in Tamil Nadu sometime in 1986 although the problem has been known
to have been in existence since the 50?s. The CSG conducted a study
and a series of workshops which brought out the following information:
a.. Intensity : During 1991 around 44% of the female
children born seemed to have been done to death while another 7%
foeticide was also committed after identifying the sex of the baby
in the study area in Salem district of Tamil Nadu. b.. Though it
seemed to have begun with one caste -- gounder, it has now spread
to other castes too. c.. This practice seems to be prevalent in
most blocks of Salem district but with varied intensity.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Towards Eradication of Female Infanticide in 80
Villages of Kabilarmalai Block of Salem District, Tamil Nadu.
The long term objective of this five year intervention by the Foundation
in partnership with CSG is to eradicate female infanticide in the
project area and bring holistic development of the targeted families,
including gender equality. More immediate aims in the last two and
a half years have been to bring down the incidence of female infanticide
substantially in the area through gender sensitization, increase
enrollment of female children in schools and extend support for
more employment opportunities for females; provide effective communication
and education to evolve a positive image for females; campaign for
equal participation of females in performing religious rites; support
for better health care and reproductive health care practices; and
enhance the level of women?s income by improving their existing
skills or introducing new economic opportunities.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Kutch Mahila Vikas Sangathan, Gujarat
The Kutch Mahila Vikas Sangathan was constituted as an organization
of rural women in Kutch in 1989. It was conceived of, and is presently
functioning as an unique partnership between rural women?s collective,
government and non-government bodies. The KMVS is a membership based
organization The purpose of this form of organizational structure
is to ensure that government, non-government and rural population
make each other accountable for their respective roles, functions
and objectives that they have committed themselves for (in KMVS).
The other concept that guided the organizational structure and philosophy
was that a vulnerable social group- rural women - needed strategic
support from larger bodies to be able to negotiate with their immediate
environment.
Some of KMVS?s unique organizational policies have been :
a.. tapping only local, Indian sources of financial
support;
b.. to recruit primarily girls and women from Kutch itself, at all
programme levels;
c.. not to initiate or enter into isolated income generating activities
- but to relook existing skills and assets;
d.. concentrate on creating and developing ?structures? a medium
through which processes are undertaken; and
e.. as a policy work primarily with the poorer, underprivileged
sections of west and north west Kutch
The main programme areas of the organization now are a handicraft
programme, programmes on ecology , legal aid, health and literacy.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Consolidating and Initiating Educational Interventions
Leading to the Empowerment of Women and Adolescent Girls in Kutch
District
For KMVS at present the priority is to nurture the leadership capabilities
of the women who are members of the Sangathan. This it plans to
do at three levels. First, systematically upgrade the knowledge,
skills and information levels of the women. This in the context
of KMVS now consolidating activities and training in the taluka
sangathans to become independent local women?s organizations Second,
create effective tools and systems of communication by which the
lead group impacts a larger number of women within their talukas.
Third, initiate the lead group to begin mobilizing adolescent girls
in the villages, primarily through educational interventions and
training.
The Foundation supported intervention for the above project therefore
has the following components; capacity building of lead groups,
educational interventions for adolescent girls and documentation
and information dissemination. The target group for capacity building
of lead groups was 500 women. The five talukas to be covered over
a three year period are Bhuj, Nakhatrana, Mundra, Abdasa and Lakhpat.
The training has been divided into three phases (each phase being
one year). Under the educational programme 750 girls in the age
group of 12-18 will be covered during the three year project period.
The talukas covered will be the same as the above. Support for documentation
and information dissemination will be extended to the documentation
centre run by the women of the Mundra Sangathan. For the last couple
of years they have been bringing out a newsletter by and for neo-literate
women. The principle support has been for wider dissemination of
this newsletter. besides this the Foundation support has allowed
the women in this Sangathan to start a screen printing unit.
|