Pakistan Today

India defends sterilisations after deaths spark outcry

India has defended a state-run programme that offers poor women cash incentives to get sterilised after the deaths of 13 women triggered international condemnation.

Health Minister Jagat Prakash Nadda said it was a “misconception” that India set sterilisation targets for local authorities in an effort to control the growth of its billion-plus population.

“It is a target-free, promotional and a demand-driven programme,” a government statement quoted Nadda as saying late Thursday.

Indian authorities have come under criticism from rights groups and the United Nations after a mass sterilisation camp in central Chhattisgarh state led to the deaths of 12 women. Another woman died after a second session, held on Monday.

Dozens more are still in hospital after Saturday’s camp, when a single surgeon operated on 83 women in just five hours – spending an average of less than four minutes on each patient.

The doctor, who was detained on Wednesday, has accused the government of making him a scapegoat for the controversial sterilisation scheme, which pays impoverished women $23 to go under the knife.

Human Rights Watch has said health workers in India are coercing women into getting sterilised, under pressure to meet informal targets.

Although India scrapped national sterilisation targets in 1996, the advocacy group said local health workers were still given quotas for the procedure and their jobs were on the line if they failed to meet them.

The United Nations has called for all those responsible for the deaths to be held accountable and said that contraceptive choices should be made “without any forms of incentives”.

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