A baby born in India has been declared the world's seven
billionth person by child rights group Plan International.
Baby Nargis was born at 07:25 local time (01:55GMT) in Mall
village in India's Uttar Pradesh sta
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Plan International says Nargis has been chosen symbolically
as it is not possible to know where exactly the seven billionth baby is born.
The United Nations estimated that on Monday 31 October, the
world's population would reach seven billion.
However, the UN itself has decided not to identify a
specific child as the seven billionth person.
Earlier on Monday, the Philippines also declared a symbolic
seven billionth baby, a girl born in a Manila hospital.
'Good luck'
Every minute, 51 babies are born in India, 11 of them in the
most populous state, Uttar Pradesh.
Nargis was born to Vinita and Ajay Kumar on Monday morning
in a small government-run hospital in Mall village, nearly 50km (31 miles) from
the state capital, Lucknow, a Plan International official told the BBC.
The daughter of a poor farmer, Nargis was chosen as the
seventh billionth baby to focus attention on the ills of female foeticide and
India's skewed sex ratio, the organisation said.
Hundreds of thousands of female foetuses are aborted in
India every year, even though sex-selective terminations and the use of
ultrasound technology for foetal sex-determination are illegal there.
Photos of baby Nargis were shown at a function attended by
nearly 250 villagers at the hospital, the BBC's Ram Dutt Tripathi reports from
Mall.
Health officials presented the birth certificate to her father
at the event.
"We were praying all along for a daughter," Ajay
Kumar said. "She is Lakshmi [Hindu goddess of wealth], she will bring us
good luck," he said.
A street play staged at the event on the importance of the
girl child saw many moist eyes among the audiences, our correspondent says.
The person chosen as the world's symbolic six billionth
person, Adnan Mevic - who was photographed in hospital in 1999 with the then UN
Secretary General Kofi Annan - is now 12 years old.
His family are living in relatively poor conditions in
Sarajevo and have expressed disappointment that since they were visited by Mr
Annan, they have heard nothing more from the UN.
It is thought that this could be one reason why the UN has
decided not to name a seven billionth child.
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