Reproduced from: http://www.indialegallive.com/constitutional-law-news/supreme-court-news/sex-determination-tests-foeticide-next-to-genocide-65336,
published May 11, 2019
Supreme
Court upholds the constitutionality of the Prohibition of Sex Selection
Act,1994, throwing out the petitioner-doctors’ plea that it was not being
implemented practically
By
Dr KK Aggarwal
Nothing
can be a more sinister, immoral and anti-social act than allowing female
foeticide.” With those words, a Supreme Court bench comprising Justices Arun
Mishra and Vineet Saran brought the curtains down on a two-year-old case that
challenged the constitutionality of Sections 23(1) and 23(2) of the
Pre-Conception and Pre-Natal Diagnostic Techniques (Prohibition of Sex
Selection Act), 1994. The petitioner, Federation of Obstetrics and
Gynaecological Societies of India (FOGSI), had contended that the Act was not
being implemented practically.
They
submitted that they were being charged with female foeticide on the basis of
certain clerical mistakes in Form F. The ambiguous wording of the Act is such
that the petitioners are liable to be charged with the heinous crime of female
foeticide and sex determination and that the members have undergone criminal
prosecution, they claimed.
Section
23(2) empowers the state medical council to suspend the registration of any
doctor indefinitely who is reported by the appropriate authority for necessary
action. The petitioners contended that this provision is ultra vires the
Constitution as it assumes the guilt of the doctor even before any trial by a
competent court. It further contended that the Act fails to distinguish between
the absence of intention and minor clerical errors. The Form F does not fulfil
the objective of what it was enacted for and any minor clerical mistake in Form
F may result in conviction of the doctor.
The
Union of India, on the other hand, contended that the petitioner was trying to
mislead the Court in the garb of a social cause and that a criminal activity
cannot be declared to be ultra vires the Constitution. The Union submitted that
the intention while enacting this Act was to uphold the rights of women and
children and to abolish the practice of pre-natal tests for gender
determination of the foetus, which subsequently leads to female foeticide in a
majority of the cases. It was contended by the government that the male-female
ratio of the country is not equal and thus the centre is duty-bound to protect
the welfare of children. Pinky Anand, additional solicitor general, also
contended that there is an alarming decline in the child sex ratio in the
country. In several districts of the country, the ratio is less than 800 girls
for 1,000 boys.
The
medical fraternity counters this, saying that in India, where a single person
does several ultrasounds a day, clerical errors in Form F are a reality. “It is
difficult to understand why these matters go to the apex court for solution
when in the current parliament itself there are over 30 doctors. Why can’t they
sit with medical professionals and come out with laws which are both doctor-
and patient-friendly. Interference by the courts only means a discordance
between the parliament and the profession,” said a doctor who did not want to
be named. As for the need to arrest the declining sex ratio, the feeling in the
community was that it has to be a movement by the medical profession and not
the regulators.
Dr KK Aggarwal
Padma Shri
Awardee
President Elect Confederation of
Medical Associations in Asia and Oceania
(CMAAO)
Group
Editor-in-Chief IJCP Publications
President Heart
Care Foundation of India
Past National President
IMA
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