A sensational story in Hindustan Times about surgeons in Indore performing hundreds of sex change operations on children turns out to be false and misleading. An investigation.
Last month, a Hindustan Times front page report claiming that Indore doctors were converting hundreds of baby girls into baby boys sent shock waves through the system, with everyone from the Prime Minister's Office to the National Commission for Protection of Child Rights (NCPCR) to the Indian Medical Association (IMA) swinging into action.
As it turns out, they need not have bothered. Senior doctors and surgeons say the operation, described on the front page of that newspaper as “turning girls into boys,” is medically impossible.
In interviews to The Hindu, several doctors accused the journalists and editors involved in reporting, writing, and packaging the story of inaccuracy, sensationalism, and an unseemly rush to grab the headlines without checking facts. The fact that the story has generated confusion and controversy over a little-known, but hugely important, medical procedure for infants born with abnormal genitalia — genitoplasty — is seen by experts as particularly unfortunate.
“It is medically impossible to change a female child into a male,” says Santosh Karmarkar, a consultant paediatric surgeon at Lilavati Hospital in Mumbai. HT's description of the operation — “Penis built surgically using tissues from female parts” — carried in an information graphic alongside the article, is “completely false,” he said. “In fact, the opposite may be possible, to convert a male phallus into a clitoris. But it is impossible to build a child's penis,” he reiterates.
S.V. Kotwal, a senior consultant urologist who has performed 32 sex-change surgeries on adult patients at the Sitaram Bhartia Institute in Delhi, agrees: “You cannot create a penis and testes on a child. No one has ever done a sex change operation on a child in published English medical literature. It is impossible.”
Corrective surgery
So what is the “controversial” operation that the doctors of Indore are actually performing? It seems to be a corrective surgery, regularly recommended by paediatricians and urologists when faced with a child with congenital abnormality of the genitalia. For example, the penis may be small or seem missing because it is buried under the skin due to abnormal curvature.
“It is about making a male child a better male, functionally or structurally. It's not about converting a child's sex,” said Dr. Karmarkar.
Ironically, the HT article quotes the Indore doctors also saying that the operation is performed on children with ambiguous or abnormal genitalia. “They say these operations are done on children whose internal organs do not match their external genitalia — most commonly, girls born with some internal male organs,” says the article.
But there is no explanation of why these babies are to be arbitrarily considered “girls” if they have male organs; in fact, sexual identity is determined by a wide range of factors, including genetic and chromosomal make-up, external appearance, and the rearing of a child.
The paper's explanation
Asked for an explanation of the discrepancies in the front page story, HT Editor Sanjoy Narayan referred this reporter to the newspaper's Bhopal Resident Editor, Abhijit Majumder. “We never said anywhere in the article that they are perfectly healthy girl babies which are being converted,” said Mr. Majumder, defending the Indore report.
However, the headline and lead of the HT article certainly read as though Indore's doctors were converting healthy baby girls into baby boys by the hundreds. It is only much later in the story that the reporter bothers to inform readers that there is a medical reason behind this operation, rather than parents blindly demanding a boy child.
Mr. Majumder admits that the story left this as an “area of ambiguity.” He attributes the faulty description of the operation to the Indore doctors themselves, quickly pointing out the corrections in subsequent coverage. “The media are not medical experts, we will go by what the doctors say,” he said.
Both the Indore doctors quoted in the initial article — Milind Joshi and Brijesh Lahoti — say that they never described genitoplasty as “turning girls into boys.” Asked if the paper had misquoted him, Dr. Joshi replied: “Misquote? They printed a completely made-up story and kept harping on it for several days to top it [all].”
In an email letter to HT sent on the day the story was published, the Indore chapter of the Indian Association of Paediatric Surgeons refuted the article's basic assertions. “We the Pediatric surgeons of the city have never ever performed any surgery to convert a normal female child into a male child because it is not possible even to think about it practically, technically, medically anywhere in this world,” said the email, shared with The Hindu by Dr. Joshi.
The letter goes on to explain how patients are scientifically evaluated by a team of doctors, clearly describing some of the abnormalities and how they are surgically corrected. The email says the number of surgeries and the supposed cost published in the newspaper were also false. The newspaper did not quote from this explanation in any follow-up coverage.
Curiously for such a potentially explosive story, the newspaper seems not to have done any basic research. In fact, a simple Google search for genitoplasty throws up a peer-reviewed study by All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) doctors at the premier institution's Paediatric Intersex clinic, offering a clear description of the operation, destroying the newspaper's assumption that it should not be performed on children, and offering the facts and figures so badly missing in the article.
The number of surgeries
At least one figure — which sparked off much of the national alarm — is provably dubious. The article said that “genitoplasty experts of Indore say each of them have turned 200 to 300 girls into ‘boys' so far,” listing seven such experts.
“Well, three doctors told us they had done about 200, 300 surgeries,” Mr. Majumder told The Hindu, not explaining how that figure was then extrapolated to include the remaining four doctors. He then admitted: “Initially, the doctors may have thought our article would be a good advertisement for them, so they may have exaggerated.”
“The reporter has not done enough homework,” said Amar Jesani of the Indian Journal of Medical Ethics. “She has not found a single girl actually converted into a boy. It's a very general, vague story which only casts suspicion due to the large number of such surgeries that are being claimed.” Once that “large number” is questioned, the premise of the story could collapse. Dr. Jesani now suggests that the Medical Council of India force the Indore doctors to open up their records to produce the hard facts that are missing in the HT story.
The problem is that those facts may end up telling a very different story.
Dr. Kotwal says he was interviewed by an HT correspondent in Delhi before the original story was published. “I told them that if you want to do investigative journalism, then do it,” he said. “Don't just go by rumours. Find the records, find the children, do a case study.” His advice was not taken, nor were his quotes used. “But [the correspondent] told me that they could not wait, because there was such ‘cut-throat competition…They were in such a rush to have a sensation.'”
By design or coincidence, the story was front-paged by HT on the same day that DNA, one of its competitors, launched its Indore edition. Mr. Majumder says the story had been worked on for over two weeks — during which a case study could not be found as parents were unwilling to talk — and denied any knowledge of the interview Dr. Kotwal had given to an HT correspondent in Delhi.
With medical criticism of the piece increasing, Dr. Kotwal was asked to present his point of view in an op-ed article two days later. Meanwhile, the newspaper continues to publish follow-up stories lauding the “impact” of the original article without any attempt to plug its factual holes.
In fact, HT does not seem to have gone back to the Indore doctors it originally quoted for any of its follow-up stories. When The Hindu asked Dr. Lahoti if he had been questioned by NCPCR after the HT story came out, he said: “They asked us several questions and seemed determined to confirm the HT reports but they couldn't find anything.” Dr. Joshi added: “All the paediatric surgeons of Indore were asked by NCPCR individually about whether this surgery was done or not by us. Our answer was this is not possible anywhere in the world and hence we also did not perform any such surgery. Our records were also very clear.” He warned that both doctors and innocent patients would suffer from HT's coverage. “This malicious story has caused immense damage to our professional reputation and is beyond repair. This will create problems for the patients and will HT bear their sufferings?”
‘Not to sensationalise'
“Our intention was not to sensationalise, or to do a sting operation to ‘expose' doctors,” said HT's Majumder. “We genuinely wanted to raise awareness about the grey areas, move the conversation from the closed doors behind which it is between a doctor and the parents and create public debate about the need for monitoring or legislation.”
There are genuine issues that need to be discussed in the public fora. For instance, doctors say that corrective surgeries are more often needed for common male defects, leading to the false impression the newspaper gave that “girls are being converted into boys.”
However, in cases of extreme ambiguity, where the child is considered “intersex,” the doctor must “assign” the sex of the child before deciding how the genitalia are corrected. The AIIMS study admits: “The gender assignment takes into account the prevalent social factors in a community and the parent's desire.” This could well mean that in some cases, the desire of Indian parents for a boy could be influencing the doctor's assignment of sexual identity.
There is also a wider international debate on whether corrective surgeries should be done at all on such children, or whether “intersex” children should be left to decide their own sexual identity upon reaching adulthood.
Unfortunately, an alarmist and misleading headline, some glaring errors, and the sheer absence of any hard facts may well have undermined any journalistic intentions of raising awareness and generating an honest debate.
(With inputs from Mahim Pratap Singh.)
(Note to readers: The Hindu competes with Hindustan Times in North India.)
(In the print edition and an earlier version of this article online, the name of HT's Bhopal Resident Editor was incorrectly spelt as Majumdar)
Keywords: sex change operations


Comments:
Excellent article. One which is well investigated, factually correct and upholding the journalistic ethos of a newspaper. Sadly the 'Hindustan Times', which I have admired for years, could only harp on sensationalism and let thier well earned name go by. Also, this whole episode should make us more aware of the severe lack of knowledge about health topics among journalists covering these issues. Over and over this has been seen in various articles and even the topics usually chosen by newspapers for health articles.
Media is treated as the fourth pillar of democracy.Therefore,it becomes its core responsibility to provide genuine news and raise socially important matters supported by genuine facts. The news headlines of HT on 26th June raises a very authentic social issue.The main theme of this issue is supported by the facts arising from the 2011 census.The child sex ratio(0-6 yrs) has declined from 976 in 1961 to 914 in 2011.The overall sex ratio being 940. The female literacy rate of Bihar,Rajasthan and Jharkhand are only around 50-55%.However, it is encouraging that the states - Punjab,Haryana known for female foeticide have registered a positive growth in sex ratio. The main causes of female foeticide are-traditional and social causes,The PNDT(Pre Natal Diagnostic Technique),lack of awareness among the general masses.India ranks 84th in the world in terms of sex ratio. The print and electronic media must jointly shoulder up the responsibility of solving the above issue.Let us it make it no 1.
This is sad but true. Today, media is as or perhaps more corrupt as any other profession. But, some hoe they seem to be living in a dream world on this truth. There was a time when politicians were looked upto as leaders and respected a lot. Today they are hated a lot. Same will happen with media. Why only HT, another English news paper Mail Today also falls in a similar category. Mail Today's editor openly abuses and gives synonyms to BJP. But, one truth they refuse to understand is that this particular news paper is not bought by public for its news. It is just bought as they carry a full central page spread for coffee time. Many people infact pick up the central fold and throw out the rest of this paper. It is time media starts waking up and take steps to avoid they going down the path of most hated profession after politicians.
Superb and conscientious reporting. Bravo Ms Jebaraj. You are as much a credit to your profession as HT is turning out to be a blot.
This article was long due really... I am glad it is no longer niche websites like The Hoot but mainstream newspapers like The Hindu that are critiquing the media and the rampant sensationalism that has replaced good journalism. Perhaps this is the Indian media's post-Radia revolution?
If a 'newspaper' can commit such a callous mistake on its very front page in such a crude manner, one wonders what else that particular 'newspaper' may be doing with its 'news' and views elsewhere. This is what is happening in most of the Indian media since there is no one to ask -- The Hindu does speak about diseases media has like paid-news, manufactured news, etc but it is time that a strong and transparent panel be formed at regional and national level to combat the diseases affecting the media just like how Lokpal is getting formed to fight against the corrupt bureaucracy, legislature and judiciary.
This article clearly suggests how people who are proclaimed journalists without researching can write anything and still get away with it! I did glance through it but found it ridiculous as I'm a Doctor myself.But what about the readers who actually get influenced by this type of gross misinformation!
Print media is a truly powerful way of getting genuine info across and not some form of advertising for personal opinions and imagined facts which cannot be substantiated with adequate evidence backing statements! Would there be any action meted out for such misinformation being rampantly spread?Would a responsible media allow this kind of dissemination? Good questions to ponder about!In the name of free speech and democracy a lot can be done in this country! It is high time wrong doers are pulled up and some form of punishment meted out as a soft reminder to avoid bad reporting!
Something is seriously fishy about Hindustan Times. This is the second major bogus cum sensationalist report that HT has published in recent months. The earlier one was about the CD (manufactured with split voices of the senior Bhushan, and leaked by Amar Singh) that was published and claimed by HT as being genuine, without any proof or documentation to back that claim. It was later found that HT had zero evidence to support its claim (and till today HT has not released any documentation to back its earlier claim). But by then, the Bhushan's reputation had already been damaged, and the debate on lokpal bill had been sidelined (to the liking of politicians). Whatever documented proof is available in the public domain clearly shows that the CD was NOT genuine, it was manufactured. Someone needs to investigate what is going in HT.
May be this time HT made a story like this.But most of the newspapers,bi-weekly and Weekly magazines carry third class titles and stories all the time. If issue is big such as the one by HT, it comes under every one's focus. Otherwise, this unhealthy business competition is an every day matter.
During the last 6-8 months I have observed Hindustan Times fall to depths..from Radia-tapes to blatant Congress propaganda and now this oddball scoop. hen I first saw the story in HT (I unfortunately still get that paper at home because I prepaid for the subscription). Its political editor Vinod Sharma comes across as an unofficial spokesperson of the Congress Party in TV debates and the paper damaged whatever little credibility it had left with the fake Bhushans CD story.
This is an awesome article. A slap for yellow-journalists who always want 'sensational' news. I informed Abhijit Majumder regarding this article via twitter and asked him to reply. These were his replies. 1. Rival papers can write what they want about the HT genitoplasty story, we stand by our report. We have enough evidence 2. I won't post a full explanation on Twitter. But it is based on the doctors' own claims, ambiguities in law 3. Although a doctors' lobby is at work to disprove the story, it's undeniable that genitoplasty on kids happen in India, and law is mum 4. Worldwide there is a debate on genitoplasty done on children, about the need for consent, and the HT story only highlights that
this is what i call an excellent article.... only facts, no propaganda... among all front line newspapers, The Hindu only has the class... great work.. keep it up...
This is not the first time that the HT has published a hoax. In fact, its Mumbai edition in 2005 began with a fake story about a cell phone conversation between Salman Khan and Ishwarya Rai in which Salman threatened Ishwarya by revealing his underworld connections.The paper had claimed that conversation had taken place in 2001. The forensic lab discovered that the the tape was a fake. The HT wanted to enter the Bombay market with a bang and made victims of the two actors. I congratulate The Hindu for exposing the HT.
Media sensationalism is not uncommon and works the same way as 'advertisement' works in businesses. Sensationalism may be viewed as another marketing tool used by the media. However, there's the issue of ethics which one would presume the media adheres to and there's probably an ombudsman who can adjudicate what's ethical and unethical reporting. If this is true, can the HT be taken to the ombudsman with possible punitive punishment? What is the response of the Editors Guild of India or the Press Council of India to this completely malicious reporting?
Hindustan Times needs to be sued for this gross, incompetent, irresponsible article. Only goes to show how desperate they are in trying to grab few eyeballs by sensationalizing false news.
By mentioning that 'The Hindu' competes with the 'HT' in North India, 'The Hindu' showed the dareness and the gutts of the true journalism. People are no fools or ninnies to read and accept infactual news as published in HT for sensationalism. HT made a scientific message into a mere 'soap-opera'.
How an old and reputed newspaper like Hindustan Times did this blunder. It seems pressure of DNA and Times of India forced the local editor to go out of the board without haaving any concrete info. In fact, in the chain of reports published by one of the oldest newspaper of the country did not referrto a single instance or example to prove their point. This episode certainly tarnish the image of the organisation to such extent and posed a question mark on the capabilities of seniors.
That the demon of gender preference still exists in the Indian society cannot be denied. However, the educated middle-class, although far from emancipation, is definitely in better standing in this aspect, than is usually unnecessarily projected (by the media). Let us not forget that the world gauges the social fabric of a nation through its national media. Such alarmist, hollow and sensational news bits (with or without taking the glaring errors, in this particular case, in consideration) makes a pronounced remark on just that.
This article is like a blow on the journalists who do a very poor research and cook up stories for making their story sensational.Hacking stories, false stories will soon make passionate journalists doubt their job.
I wonder how many people holding placards went and stood before the hospitals in Indore burning effigies and beating on photographs with their slippers after reading the HT article. In a country like ours where people waste no time in forming an 'angry mob', false stories for the sake of sensationalism are an easy way to damage buses, shop windows and reputations.
Finally someone to keep the media honest! It's been a long time coming. Truly excellent fair-handed investigation.
Fantastic reporting. Goes miles to prove, time and again, that The Hindu remains one of the last few newspapers in India (well, even probably the world) that truly understand the meaning of journalism - to be objective, ethical, relevant and most importantly, where substantial thought is rendered prior to printing
Its a very good article. But the damage has already happened. All newspapers abroad have putit in bold headings. It was a nightmare explaining to my local friends, in Dublin, about all sorts of questions leading from this topic.
I am glad that The Hindu has decided to opine about the unhealthy story published in HT. The editor cannot deny that he couldn't know about what they were writing. It is tenth grade biology and something almost every educated individual knows. '...pumped with hormones...'? I am sorry... How does that even make any sense? Next thing they'll say is that doctors are resorting to magic to convert female babies into male ones.
News papers are the only mode a common man access to know about the happenings in the world!We tend to believe the printed things on the paper. Hindustan Times have cheated on those doctors working in Indore hospital,misguided the common people. They must have properly checked the facts before they thought of publishing in the front page,it's a National news paper.
We need an apology from the editor and managment to be published on the front page.
The word sensationalism is the marketing mantra of the media houses.They should understand that sensationalism wont stand for long,if it is not reporting correct news to its readers.
Kudos to the Hindu for one more excellent revelation. It is indeed shocking to know that HT had twisted facts and reported a false story as true so horrendously to discredit the medical community; also obliquely casting aspersions on innocent parents as averse to girl child, the purpose to sensationalize and be one up. Just when investigative journalism is gaining public appreciation, this instance has certainly smeared a blot on its veracity. The concerned personnel responsible for such baseless reporting should be apprehended and tried for libel and falsehood; otherwise, such condemnable reporting would continue to flourish with impunity
I am a doctor and have been to a couple of radio and TV interviews on health related issues. I find it frustrating to know that most of the RJs and TV anchors go by prevailing health related myths and try to get a sound byte out of the doctors that suits their beliefs. It is high time such interviews are conducted by people with some basic understanding of medical issues. May be colleges professing journalism can come up with media courses that deal exclusively with health related issues. I would also like to congratulate THE HINDU for carrying this article, for it serves as an eye-opener for people that not everything that figures in the popular press is true. We come across patients carrying printouts of such articles taken from news papers and internet and it is not always easy to refute such things in face of a desperate patient who would want to believe everything which figures in such articles.
There should be an investigation against the paper for sure. This is irresponsible journalism like any other crime.
All said and done this is a sensible and sane article in The Hindu. I laud this effort. It clearly exposes the hunger of journalists to mislead innocent public for the sake of boosting TRP of their paper and, to some extent greed of some surgeons to gain more popularity and practice.It's a fact that such operation as described in the Indore HT is impossible and the controversy thus created should now be laid to rest for the benefit of unfortunate children born with such birth defects
Excellent surgery of a fake 'scoop'. Kudos to Priscilla!
A great article and an eye opener for public as well as for the media on how news is being manipulated and served as a totally different dish just to raise their so called trps. As the competition is growing high, to stay in the market, journalists sometimes don't think what sense the news makes.
HT article is really a sign of immature journalism.Such a national level newspaper published that kind of news in front page without investigating properly is a matter of shame.
Oh my god! Though the initial article got published here in Sydney morning herald, this corrective article is not published.. which means we have millions here thinking the initial article to be true. So they have this fact in mind that Indians hate baby girls as they cannot pay for dowry and hence they are converting them to baby boys for a few lakh rupees. Wish this gets published here.
The article is really grim and appalling. The Hindustan Times is one of the reputed newspapers in India and a lot of people gorge on the news provided by it, but such misleading articles that too on the front page is really worrisome. The journalists should atleast take up the responsibility to verify the facts before submitting any article. Going through the comments clearly shows what wrong impressions about India are being made in other countries about such happenings. The Editor,if not the journalists, should take on the responsibility to correct and verify such articles.
Facts are always very important and should not be sacrificed for some sensationalising articles.
This is ridiculous journalism. The HT story was picked up by papers across the world, giving India an hour of shame. But it is actually shame on HT, they should apologise with no delay on their front page.
Thank you for writing the above article, HT should have been more responsible, spreading mailicious news for the sake of cut throat competition is making mockery of the fourth pillar of the democracy. As a woman, i had been severely depressed thinking of the depths our medical practitioners are going to but now it seems that the journalists are not be believed either.
I believe HT tried to change the way nature works.I believe in this world no-one has enough power to overpower NATURE.
Here we are seeing two faces of media One trying to bring false facts and other trying to bring real facts.But in this chaos , the common readers, newspaper are losing credibility of the information presented in the newspaper.
I believe strict action needs to be taken and a independent watchdog tribunal should be setup to try out these cases so that media is not able to mislead anyone.My case rests on the fact that it is because THE HINDU brought this out we came to know about it but what will happen if THE HINDU didn't come up with this fact ?
The question is not dilution of freedom of expression.
Here the bigger question is misrepresentation of facts leading to unwanted consequences.
we must be fortunate enough to have papers like The Hindu which does not just go after sensationalism just blindly by printing the wrong news.And they are bringing out rhe truth in some or the other way out to educate people.that is really good work.
Great work by The Hindu, i was a long admirer of the Newspaper, it has only given me more reasons for my belief. The reporter who took out this story seemed looking for sensation, at the same time editor, must have felt the pressure of launch of DNA and The times of India in MP. Still such blunders and blatant falsehood wasn't expected of HT.
I appreciate The Hindu in bringing Reality into the picture.The society will speak against such false news.
When I read the following line in the end - I was amazed by the honesty
that The Hindu shows. (Note to readers: The Hindu competes with Hindustan Times in North India.) The Hindu. Respect.
Not only HT published this 'misleading' story but forced the authorities to act on it in order to claim impact subsequently. Instead, they should have searched a single example to endorse the points raised in the story. The Hindu did excellent job by exposing this type of sensationalism. Now, HT management should act as its credibility is at stake.
People should stop buying sensational newspapers like times of India, HT etc and invest in good newspapers like Hindu or good news magazines. There is a big risk of page 3 items having bad influence on their children as well.i have seen many of the bright students reading mainly good magazines like CSR, Maths today, physics today etc.
This has tarnished the image of journalists, particularly the H.T.
Readers may like to know that HT has finally issued a clarification on its story. Of course it falls woefully short of an honest admission of having published a wrong story:
A clarification
Dear readers,
A June 26 report in Hindustan Times on sex surgeries in Indore has evoked diverse reactions from the government, the medical fraternity, readers and a section of the media. The principal criticism has been that the news report has created confusion and controversy over genitoplasty, a lesser-known medical procedure, which is used to correct genital and sexual ambiguities. We have also been accused of trying to sensationalise a non-issue. Much of this confusion and criticism has stemmed from the headline - 'Docs turn scores of baby girls into boys' - which was irrelevant to the story. We regret this. We, however, had no intention to sensationalise. The rationale behind the story was to draw attention to a practice that concerns serious national issues such as choice of gender and parental bias for a boy child. Nowhere in our stories did we say that healthy little girls were being converted into boys. We have repeatedly said that these surgeries were done 'under the pretext or on the premise' of correcting children with gender ambiguity. We've done more than our share of due diligence in carrying the Indore doctors' version. Main parts of the doctors' letter and press release were carried in our editions from Indore and Bhopal on June 28 on Page 1 under 'What Doctors Say' and again on June 29 on Page 4 as 'The Other Side'. All of these, and the larger issues that we have raised, have been overlooked by a rival newspaper that called our reportage 'false and misleading.' Curiously, that newspaper quoted an Aiims study saying 'gender assignment takes into account the prevalent social factors in a community and the parent's desire. This could well mean that in some cases, the desire of Indian parents for a boy could be influencing the doctor's assignment of sexual identity.' Precisely our point. Thank You,
Editor"
Instead of admitting that story was misleading, HT has been trying to blame rival newspapers for the controversy. It's really shameful. I think, the papers like HT and TOI should follow the footsteps of The Hindu as far as reporting is concerned.
While it's great that the Hindu debunked the fallacious piece on sex change operations in Indore, this article is just plain incorrect. Sex changes from female to male have been possible since 1946. It's called a phalloplasty, and thousands of working penises have been constructed from female genital tissue. A simple Google Scholar or Wikipedia search on 'phalloplasty' yields evidence galore. Clearly it's The Hindu that hasn't done its homework!
Just a clarification to Joya Banerjee's comment on phalloplasty, which is indeed a surgical procedure to construct a penis. The doctors we have quoted in the article above only say that such a surgery is medically impossible to perform on a child.
What a joy to find such clear thinking. Thanks for posting!
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