Ten women have died in India and
dozens more are in hospital, some in a critical condition, after a
state-run programme that pays women to undergo sterilisation went badly
wrong, officials said Tuesday.
Sterilisation
is one of the most popular methods of family planning in India, where
the government provides cash and other incentives to try to control the
country's billion-plus population, but rights groups say the system is
often abused.
More than 60
women fell ill after undergoing the surgery over the weekend in the
central state of Chhattisgarh, and 10 have now died, local official
Sonmani Borah told AFP.
"With
two more deaths reported today (Tuesday), the death toll in the family
planning operation-related case has gone up to 10,″ Borah told AFP by
phone.
The
women suffered vomiting and a dramatic fall in blood pressure, said
Borah, the commissioner for Bilaspur district, where the camp was held.
It
was not immediately clear what caused the deaths, but doctors in the
state told AFP the women's symptoms suggest the drugs they were given
after the relatively simple procedure may have been the cause.
Under pressure to meet targets, some local governments also offer other incentives such as cars and electrical goods to couples volunteering for sterilisation.
Although the surgery is voluntary, rights groups say the target-driven nature of the programme has led to women being coerced into being sterilised, often in inadequate medical facilities.
Chhattisgarh Chief Minister Raman Singh suspended four top health officials over the deaths, while a police complaint was lodged against the surgeon who performed the operations.
Singh also announced compensation of 400,000 rupees ($6,500) for each of the families of those women who died.
Angry residents took to
the streets of Bilaspur where many of the women have been hospitalised
demanding action against those responsible.
The
women had undergone laparoscopic sterilisation, a process in which the
fallopian tubes are blocked, usually under general anaesthesia.
The Indian Express daily said the surgeries were carried out by one doctor and his assistant in around five hours.
"There
was no negligence. He is a senior doctor. We will probe (the
incident)," the chief medical officer of Bilaspur R.K. Bhange told the
newspaper.
Last year,
authorities in eastern India came under fire after a news channel
unearthed footage showing scores of women dumped unconscious in a field
following a mass sterilisation.
The
women had all undergone the procedure at a hospital that local
officials said was not equipped to accommodate such a large number of
patients.
But
a 2012 report by Human Rights Watch urged the government to set up an
independent grievance redress system to allow people to report coercion
and poor quality services at sterilisation centres.
It
also said the government should prioritise training for male government
workers to provide men with information and counselling about
contraceptive choices.
India's
family planning programme has traditionally focused on women, and
experts say that male sterilisation is still not accepted socially.
Government
figures from 2008 show that around one third of the 54 percent of the
population that reported using any form of family planning opted for
female sterilisation.
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