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Sports Minister Robert Romawia Royte did not mention the minimum number of children.
The declaration came at a time when several Indian states are advocating a population control policy.
On the occasion of Father’s Day on Sunday, Royte announced that he would reward a living man or woman having the largest number of offspring within his Aizawl East-2 assembly constituency with a cash incentive of Rs 1 lakh.
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Apparently, the cost of the incentive will be borne by a construction consultancy firm owned by Royte’s son.
The minister said that the infertility rate and the decreasing growth rate of the Mizo population has become a serious concern.
“Mizoram is far below the optimum number of people to attain development in various fields because of the gradual decline in its population. Low population is a serious issue and hurdle for small communities or tribes like Mizos to survive and progress,” Royte said.
Mizoram is home to various Mizo tribes.
He said that some churches and influential civil society organisations like the Young Mizo Association are advocating a baby boom policy to encourage population growth for ensuring optimum size vis-a-vis the area of the state.
Mizoram’s population was 1,091,014, according to the 2011 census. The state covers an area of approximately 21,087 square kilometres.
With only 52 persons per square kilometre, Mizoram has the second-lowest population density in the country next to Arunachal Pradesh, which has a population density of 17 persons per sq km. The national average is 382 per sq km.
Mizoram’s neighbour Assam, however, is treading a different path.
Assam Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma recently announced that his government will gradually implement a two-child policy for availing benefits under certain schemes funded by the state.
In 2019, the state administration decided that those with more than two children would not be eligible for government jobs from January 2021. Assam currently has a two-child norm along with other requirements for contesting in panchayat polls.
On Sunday, Uttar Pradesh Law Commission Chairman Aditya Nath Mittal said that there should be a check on the increasing population as it is creating problems in the state.
However, the Population Foundation of India (PFI), an NGO, has said that India should learn from China’s revision of its two-child policy claiming the move shows that empowering women and enhancing their capabilities work better than coercive population policies.
In December last year, the Union Ministry of Health and Family Welfare told the Supreme Court that the family welfare programme in India is voluntary in nature.