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SHOCKING: One woman dies in India every two hours due to unsafe abortion

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More than 10 million women secretly terminate their pregnancies every year in India.

New Delhi: Unsafe abortions conducted in unsanitary conditions by unqualified practitioners or practitioners are killing one woman every two hours in India, says a data on maternal mortality ratio (MMR) and Sample Registration System (SRS) compiled by Ipas, India, a global NGO working on ending preventable deaths and disabilities from unsafe abortion.
 

Abortion
Photo: www.who.int

Rural government clinics are often nothing more than skeletal brick structures with tin roofs and sporadic electricity supply. Women lie on old gurneys or beds if one is available; just as often, they bed down in dark rooms on mud floors scattered with bloody dressings. Less than 20% of these centers provide legitimate abortion facilities, compelling many rural women to seek alternatives.

“India’s expenditure on health care is only 3.9% of its gross domestic product, putting it on par with Gabon or the Central African Republic,” says a report published in Times.

Indian abortion laws are liberal — the country is one of only 14 that allow abortion on broad grounds. But misunderstandings about the law and conservative social codes that regard pregnancy out of wedlock as abhorrent mean that many women don’t get help.

 

Over 10 million women terminate their pregnancies in the privacy of their homes every year. It reflects the government’s failure to adequately address family planning needs and educating women about contraceptives.

Millions of women – says an IndiaSpend report – become pregnant because they lack access to contraceptive devices, or are fearful of using themor, or are ignorant about contraceptive devices.

According to the District Level Household and Facility Survey 2007-08, one in every five women in the country do not get contraceptives because of unmet need of family planning programmes and budget skewed towards sterilisation.

A 2005-06 National Family Health Survey estimate, which is the latest available in public domain, eliminating all unwanted births by adequately meeting the need for contraceptives would reduce India’s total fertility rate below the replacement level – a stage where the population neither increases nor decreases – of 2.1, says the report.

India’s fertility rate is currently 2.3, but if women were provided contraceptive devices and guaranteed safe abortions, apart from keeping women safe, fewer babies would be born, and the fertility rate could fall to 1.9 (the same as US, Australia and Sweden), says the report of the website quoting the estimate cites in the above paragraph.

An estimated 2 to 5% Indian women require surgical intervention to resolve an incomplete abortion, terminate a continuing pregnancy, or control bleeding, according to the World Health Organization.

The taking of pills to induce an abortion enters the national data as no more than pharmaceutical industry sales data.

Against 0.7 million reported annual abortions, India logged sales of 11 million units of popular abortion medicines, mifepristone and misoprostol, according to this June 2016 report in Lancet, a global medical journal.

Courtesy: Janta Ka Reporter
 

New report punctures Arun Jaitley’s claims that normalcy in currency operations restored

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Finance Minister Arun Jaitley on Friday made a sensational claim that normalcy had been restored within few weeks of the unprecedented decision to recall 86 percent of the high-denomination currency in circulation.
 
Jaitley didn’t stop here. He went a step further and announced that there was absolutely no no shortage of notes in market.
 
arun jaitley's claims puntured

Jaitley, according to a report by PTI, said that currency note printing presses of Reserve Bank of India as well as Security Printing and Minting Corporation of India Ltd (SPMCIL) have worked without a break to remonetise by issuing new bank notes.

Speaking at the 11th Foundation Day function of SPMCIL in the national capital, he made fun of his government’s critics saying that the easiest task during demonetisation was to pass comments and make snide remarks.

“But, the toughest work is to implement it. This is perhaps the biggest demonetisation drive in the world that was aimed at striking at the very root of corruption, black money and counterfeit currency,” he said.

 

Stating that people often commented that it may take up to one year or at least seven months to restore normalcy, he said the task has been achieved within a few weeks. “Normalcy has been restored within a few weeks and there is no shortage (of bank notes) in market for even a day,” he said.

And this has been achieved “without a single incident” of unrest anywhere in the country, he said, adding that this was possible because of the exemplary work done by the printing presses of RBI and SPMCIL who kept the supply line going.
 

However, Jaitley’s claims were far from the ground reality as millions across India continued to complain about dry ATMs even 100 days after the original announcement.

A report by IANS said that only one ATM in Laxmi Nagar of east Delhi was found dispensing cash out of a total of eight visited by its reporter. Rest either had ‘no cash’ signs or were simply ‘out of order’.
 

In posh Yusuf Sarai area of south Delhi, the ATMs of HDFC Bank, Canara Bank, Punjab National Bank (PNB), Kotak Mahindra Bank and IndusInd Bank were all found cashless. An Axis Bank ATM, according to the agency report, was the only one found with cash in the vicinity.
 
The situation in Sansad Marg (Parliament Street) was no different as none of the four State Bank of India (SBI) ATMs had cash, in addition to an Axis Bank machine near the YMCA nearby, which has not had cash since the demonetisation on November 8 last year.
In Delhi’s most happening Connaught Place, as many as eight ATMs were found to be either dysfunctional or without cash. This was reported from just two blocks of the shopping hub of Delhi.
 
(With inputs from PTI and IANS)

BJP MLA’s outrageous comments on farmers’ plight, says those committing suicides were in habit of licking subsidies

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In 2014, a total of 5,650 farmers committed suicide across India, but almost half of those suicide cases were reported from Maharashtra. It was revealed in the first ever comprehensive data on farmers’ suicides by National Crime Records Bureau.

The reasons for these farmers’ death, according to the report, were poor debt, bankruptcy, crop failure or family problems.

farmers suicides licking subsidies

Three of the top four states with maximum number of farmers’ suicides were those where BJP had governments. This included Maharashtra (2,568 suicide cases), Telangana (898), Madhya Pradesh (826) and Chhattisgarh (443).

And yet, the senior public representatives belonging to the ruling BJP have time and again made fun of farmers’ plight.

The latest in the series is Madhya Pradesh MLA, Rameshwar Sharma, who has made astonishingly insensitive comments about farmers being forced to end their lives due to extreme poverty.

In the video shared by news agency ANI, Sharma said that those who committed suicides weren’t ‘real farmers’ but those who were in the habit of licking government subsidies.

Sharma said, “Mare vo kisaan hain jo kisaan kum aur subsidy chaatne ka vyapaar zyada karte hain (Those who have committed suicide are those who had less credibility as farmers and more of traders licking government subsidies.”

 

It appears that Sharma isn’t the only BJP politician with utter disdain for India’s farmers.

In February last year, a BJP MP from Maharashtra, Gopal Shetty had said that those committing suicides were doing so because it had become a fashion trend.

Shetty was quoted, “All farmer suicides are not only because of hunger and unemployment. There is a fashion, a trend is on. If Maharashtra government is giving Rs 5 lakh, another government is giving Rs 7 lakh, Rs 8 lakh. There is a competition going on to give money to farmers.”

In 2015, soon after Narendra Modi won a historic mandate at the Centre, his agriculture Minister, Radha Mohan Singh, blamed dowry, drugs, love affairs and impotency for over 1400 farmer suicides in India that year.

“According to the National Crime Records Bureau, causes of (farmer) suicides include family problems, illness, drugs… dowry, love affairs and impotency,” Singh said in a written reply to a question, while not ruling out debt as one of the reasons at the same time.

The remarks immediately sparked off a furore by the Opposition, which had been targeting the government for a long time over the controversial land bill, deemed as anti farmer.

Courtesy: Janta Ka Reporter