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11-Year-Old Rape Survivor Allowed To Abort Foetus

The stories of rape have always been disturbing to read, particularly that of little girls who were raped by a close relative, neighbour or just about any person they trusted. The Madras HC has allowed an 11-year-old girl to abort her 24-week old foetus because it is risky to her. The girl, studying in class seven, was raped by her nephew and her mother had sought to terminate her pregnancy.

Doctors have said that if the foetus isn’t removed, it puts the girl at risk. She could suffer from severe anaemia, pregnancy-induced hypertension, pre-term labour and a caesarean section at the time of delivery, reports The News Minute.

The foetus will be given for medical examination and DNA test in the criminal case registered against the survivor’s nephew. He has thus far been booked under the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act and remanded to judicial custody.

For the uninitiated, The Medical Termination of Pregnancy (MTP) Act 1971 allows for abortion up to 20 weeks providing two doctors sign off. Beyond that, it is only possible if there is a threat to the life of the mother or severe abnormalities to the foetus but only if the courts permit. However, by the time the courts deliberate on it, the 20-week period could well pass leaving the woman with an unwanted pregnancy. Abnormalities to the foetus are normally detected after 20 weeks into the pregnancy by which time it is legally too late.


Other cases:

The National Crime Records Bureau’s (NCRB) showcased the rate of crime against children in India in 2016. The records show that while in 2015, 10,854 cases of rape under Section 376 of the IPC and under Sections 4 and 6 of POCSO Act were registered pan-India, 2016 saw 19,765 of such cases being registered. The most number of minor rape cases were reported in Madhya Pradesh (2,467), Maharashtra (2,292), Uttar Pradesh (2,115), Odisha (1,258) and Tamil Nadu (1,169) in 2016.

2018, however, has recorded a number of brutal cases of children being raped and murdered, with the statistics depicting a grimmer picture.

The year began with the news of the Kathua Rape Case. The eight-year-old girl was brutally gang-raped by eight different men in a temple in Kathua, belonged to the Muslim Bakerwals community. She was reportedly held for days in the temple and raped, in what appears to have been an effort to drive out the remaining members of the community from the region.

This was followed by the Jind & Panipat Rape Case. Earlier in January, the body of a 15-year-old girl from Jind, Haryana, who had been missing for three days, was found in the village of Jhansa. Medical reports showed that she had been brutally gang-raped, and her private parts had been mutilated. As for the Panipat case, an 11-year-old girl was raped and murdered by two of her neighbours, who reportedly committed necrophilia after they had murdered her.

In Tamil Nadu, an 11-year-old girl with a hearing disorder was gang-raped by at least 22 men in Chennai for over 7 months. Police arrested 18 men including the security men, lift operator and water suppliers of the society.