China's unwanted girls

By Adam Brookes in Beijing On the garbage dumps that surround Beijing, scavengers from time to time will find a newborn baby girl amid the stinking refuge. Sometimes she is still alive.

Boys are the best, because they can work

Zhang Hongying, mother Chen Rong makes her living from scavenging garbage, and over the years she has found five little girls on the tips. She brought them all home to her one-room brick shack and she and her husband try to give them a chance. In China, couples are permitted one, at most two, children. Too frequently a girl is a disappointment. Thrown away Every year, say researchers, perhaps a million girl foetuses are aborted and tens of thousands of girl babies are abandoned.

"One baby died before we even got her home," says Mrs Chen. "Another garbage scavenger had taken her clothes and then left her to die. "I was the only one who would pick her up. I couldn't bear to see her die. "Parents shouldn't throw away their children. This shouldn't be happening." Community pressure But Chinese society is throwing away its little girls at an astounding rate. For every 100 girls registered at birth, there are now 118 little boys - in other words, nearly one seventh of Chinese girl babies are going missing. "Some of those girls are alive, they are just not registered," says Professor Zhai Zhenwu, of Beijing's People's University. "Some are abandoned, but many are aborted when the parents find out the foetus is a girl.

"This is a huge problem for China. We already have about 20 million boys who will never be able to marry because there aren't enough women. "That number rises by 1.5 million every year. "It will bring crime and prostitution. It will destabilise China." Jhiu Hongying is 19 and pregnant. The pressure on her to produce a boy is huge. Family and community demand it. A boy will bring status. He will continue the family line. "Boys are the best, because they can work," says the girl's mother, Zhang Hongying. "They're stronger. "If my daughter has a son, everyone will celebrate. "All the neighbours want her child to be a boy." At a Beijing temple, women come to pray that the foetus in their womb is that of a boy. Chinese tradition despises the girl child. This powerful cultural preference for sons is heightened by the one-child policy. The result - millions of nameless baby girls in China are simply disappearing.