Gendercide

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Gendercide is a neologism that refers to the systematic killing of members of a specific sex, either males or females.[1] The term is intended to be sex-neutral, but it is mostly used in feminism to refer to female victims (feminicide or femicide), though it has also been used to refer to male victims (viricide).

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The systematic killing of men, viricide, happens sometimes during war to reduce an enemy's potential pool of soldiers; this happened for example in the 1988 Anfal campaign against Kurdish men and boys[2][3][4] in Iraq and on 12 July 1995 during the Srebrenica massacre of Bosniak men and boys.[5][6] During the 1984 Anti-Sikh riots men were targeted overwhelmingly.[7]

Men who refused to conscription in the military have been the target of forced labor, mutilation, and massacre in the nations of Angola, Ethiopia, Iraq, and Russia[8].

Femicide is the systematic killing of women because they are women. Femicide is seen as a gender crime. It is attested from the 1820s.[9]

There have been reports of femicide in Guatemala City, Guatemala, and in Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua, Mexico[10]. The murders in Juarez, also known as las muertas de Juárez ("The dead women of Juárez"), and Guatemala were reportedly not investigated by the local authorities. Most of the women were raped before being murdered and some were mutilated, tortured and dismembered. In Guatemala City about 20% of the over 500 women murdered in 2004 and 2005 were killed in pairs, due to an "intimate relationship", according to Claudia Acevedo of Lesbiradas.[citation needed]

There is also concern that femicide of Aboriginal women is taking place in Canada. Five hundred Aboriginal women have been reported missing or murdered since 1980, a disproportionate proportion compared to non-Aboriginal women. According to sociological studies, these women are seen as easy targets because their race places them at the bottom of the social and economic hierarchy. Many of the missing women have been dismissed as prostitutes and their disappearances have gone uninvestigated. A major factor in bringing international attention to Canadian women was the murder of Helen Betty Osborne in 1971.[11]

The most widespread form of femicide is in the form of sex-selective infanticide in cultures with strong preferences for male offspring, notably in the mainland of the People's Republic of China, India, and South Korea. These practices result in demographic imbalance with an excess of males.

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