What Geoffrey Davis’s report reveals
The 1971 Bangladesh genocide is often remembered through mass killing, political repression, and the destruction of villages and towns. Yet Geoffrey Davis’s report, The Changing Face of Genocide: Bangladesh, 1971-72, draws attention to another central dimension of the atrocities: the large-scale rape of women and girls and its devastating aftermath. Based on his direct involvement in the post-war abortion programme in Bangladesh, Davis argued that rape was not simply an incidental crime of war. In his view, it formed part of a broader pattern of violence used to terrorise, humiliate, and break Bengali society.
Who was the author and what was his role?
Within the article, Geoffrey Davis presents himself not primarily as a historian or political commentator, but as a medical practitioner directly involved in the post-war response to rape-related pregnancies in Bangladesh. He explicitly states that his briefing in England was that approximately 200,000 unwanted pregnancies were thought to exist in Bangladesh in March 1972, that a clinic had begun operating in Dhaka, and that his own role was “to instruct all interested parties in practical methods for the termination of advanced pregnancy.” This makes clear that he was writing as an external medical actor involved in the abortion and rehabilitation response after the war. His perspective is therefore both immediate and interventionist. He was not a detached observer. He was someone participating in the post-war programme and reporting on what he encountered.
What does the report claim?
The central claim of the report is that rape during the 1971 Bangladesh war was not random or incidental, but was part of a wider strategy of domination and destruction. Davis opens with a stark assertion that part of the overall plan for the subjugation of Bangladesh involved an order to the West Pakistan army to impregnate as many Bengali women as possible in order to disrupt what he calls the “racial integrity” of Bengalis. He treats sexual violence not merely as wartime abuse, but as an organised political instrument. Later in the report, however, he qualifies this claim to some extent by stating that there was no direct evidence available to him that this policy had been formally dictated by the central Islamabad political or military command, though he refers to reports from Punjabi officers suggesting that it was policy handed down through military channels. This internal tension is important. The report strongly alleges systematic intent, but also acknowledges limits in documentary proof.
A second major claim is that rape created a national crisis of unwanted pregnancies after liberation. Davis argues that large numbers of girls and women, including very young teenagers, were left pregnant as a result of wartime sexual violence. He presents the abortion programme as an emergency response to this crisis. He further claims that the official programme only captured a small share of the actual problem because most women had already sought abortions through informal village practitioners, local healers, or dangerous self-induced methods before formal services became available.
A third major claim is that rape in 1971 had consequences that extended far beyond the immediate assault. The report links wartime rape to suicide, social exclusion, venereal disease, gynaecological injuries, pelvic infections, and long-term bodily damage. Davis therefore advances a broader understanding of genocide, one in which mass atrocity also operates through reproductive violence, social dishonour, and the destruction of the future health of a people.
Numbers and estimates presented in the report
The report contains several numerical estimates. The official figure for raped women, according to Davis, was 200,000. He explains that this figure was derived from an estimate that approximately two girls were reported missing per day in each Thana during the occupation, across about 480 thanas over roughly 270 days, producing a notional total of 268,200, later rounded down to 200,000. Davis himself argues that this was an underestimate. He says it excluded women taken from areas where families did not report the crime, women raped during transient military operations in villages, and women separated from refugee columns on the way to India.
He then advances a separate line of reasoning. Starting from a rough population estimate, he suggests that if one third of women of reproductive age in the affected population were raped, that alone could imply around 300,000 rape victims. He then combines this with his assumptions about women kept for repeated use and discarded once pregnant, eventually reaching a figure of 350,000 unwanted pregnancies by the end of December 1971. In another section, using district-level impressions, he says that a figure around 360,000 unwanted pregnancies would be “in fair agreement” with his earlier estimate. Later, he states that in his opinion the incidence of unwanted pregnancy at liberation was probably about right at 300,000 to 400,000, and that the vast majority of these had already been dealt with locally through indigenous abortion practices.
For officially performed terminations, Davis says he knew of approximately 800 terminations of pregnancy carried out through the formal programme across the country, mainly involving mid- and third-trimester pregnancies, with two unavoidable deaths. He contrasts this small number with the much larger scale of village abortions, which he places between 300,000 and 400,000. He also cites a small diagnostic sample from outside Dhaka in which 10 pregnant women were tested, of whom 6 had gonorrhoea and 4 had gonorrhoea plus a positive Wassermann reaction. From this he extrapolates a far wider venereal disease crisis.
What atrocities against women are described?
The report documents several forms of atrocity directed at women and girls.
First, it records repeated rape by soldiers and local collaborators. Davis cites contemporary press reports describing women taken from homes, refugee groups, and villages, and then raped by multiple soldiers. In one quoted case, a girl in a refugee camp recounts that her parents were killed and she was then raped by three men. In another, daughters were repeatedly raped in front of their father. In another, women between the ages of 12 and 35 in a village were reportedly all raped while men older than 12 were shot. The report also records that some women were taken for prostitution, held in camps, and allocated nightly to officials.
Second, the report describes prolonged captivity and repeated sexual exploitation. Davis claims that some women were kept for repeated use until they became pregnant or showed overt signs of venereal disease, at which point they were discarded if Bengali and killed if Hindu. This is one of the most severe claims in the report because it links rape to captivity, group targeting, bodily injury, pregnancy, and discriminatory killing.
Third, the report describes the aftermath of rape as another layer of violence. It refers to women cast out by families, women with physical injuries, women driven to suicide, and women left with long-term reproductive health complications after unsafe abortions. Davis says that by the time the formal programme began, many women had already undergone village abortions involving sharpened sticks, abortifacient roots, and improvised pharmacological methods. He presents these not as isolated medical incidents, but as part of the broader violence that rape had unleashed upon women’s bodies and lives.
Fourth, the report repeatedly notes that girls and young women were especially targeted. He refers to pregnant girls in their early teens, women aged 12 to 35 in one village case, and the high prevalence of untreated disease among young women. He also comments, in disturbing language, that the army targeted young attractive women.
Why does the report frame this as genocide?
Davis calls this “the changing face of genocide”. By this he means that genocide should not be understood only as direct mass killing. In his account, genocide also appears through sexual violence, forced pregnancy, reproductive harm, and the destruction of social and biological continuity. The report repeatedly connects rape with the subjugation of Bangladesh as a people, not merely with the abuse of individual women.
The genocidal dimension in the report rests on several linked ideas.
First, rape is presented as targeted violence against Bengali women as members of a collectivity. Davis does not depict these assaults as ordinary wartime indiscipline. He frames them as attacks on Bengali society through women’s bodies.
Second, the report suggests an intent to alter or violate communal continuity through forced impregnation. His opening claim is that Bengali women were to be impregnated systematically in order to damage the group’s integrity.
Third, rape is shown as part of a wider pattern of destruction. The same article that discusses sexual violence also refers to killings of students, engineers, doctors, and other perceived leaders, along with the deliberate crushing of the economic and social base of East Pakistan. In this wider setting, rape appears not as an isolated crime but as one instrument within a larger campaign of devastation.
Fourth, the report emphasises enduring group harm. Davis argues that the consequences of rape included unwanted pregnancies, unsafe abortions, venereal disease, pelvic infections, suicide, stigma, and long-term bodily damage among a large part of one generation of women. This is crucial to his genocide framing. The violence was not over when the shooting stopped. Its effects continued inside families, villages, and reproductive health for months and years afterwards.
How does rape link to genocide in this report?
Based on this report alone, rape is linked to genocide in four principal ways.
It is linked through intent, because the author claims that impregnation of Bengali women was pursued as part of the subjugation of Bangladesh.
It is linked through scale, because the report insists that rape was widespread and systematic, not episodic. The repeated use of large estimates is meant to establish that the phenomenon was massive and national in scope.
It is linked through group destruction, because the victims are represented as Bengali women attacked precisely in their capacity as members of a targeted population. Their violation is treated as a way of terrorising families, dishonouring communities, and breaking the social future of the nation.
It is linked through aftermath, because the report presents the resulting pregnancies, disease, stigma, unsafe abortions, and suicides as part of the continuing destructive impact of the 1971 atrocities. Genocide, in this framing, is not confined to killing. It includes deep and lasting injury to the bodily and social reproduction of a people.
Concluding remarks
Taken on its own terms, Geoffrey Davis’s report presents rape in 1971 Bangladesh as a systematic and devastating instrument of violence directed against Bengali women and, through them, against Bengali society. It argues that wartime rape produced an immense crisis of unwanted pregnancies, led to widespread unsafe abortions, and left behind an entire landscape of trauma, disease, stigma, and reproductive injury. For Davis, this is why the violence should be understood as genocide. Its “changing face” lay in the fact that destruction was carried out not only by bullets and massacres, but also through women’s bodies, forced pregnancy, and the long afterlife of sexual violence in a shattered society.
Geoffrey Davis was an Australian medical doctor, best known in the early 1970s for his work in contraception, abortion services, and advanced pregnancy termination. Trained at the University of Sydney, he later practised in both Sydney and London, where he became associated with late-term abortion care and developed a technique for terminating advanced pregnancies. In 1972, during the immediate aftermath of the Bangladesh Liberation War, Davis travelled to war-ravaged Bangladesh and worked with the Bangladesh Women’s Rehabilitation Programme and international agencies to address pregnancies resulting from the mass rape of Bengali women and girls. His role involved performing abortions, training medical staff, and helping to organise emergency reproductive health services across the country. For this reason, he remains an important medical figure in discussions of wartime rape and its humanitarian aftermath in Bangladesh.
Source: Davis, G. (1973). The Changing Face of Genocide – Bangladesh, 1971-72: An account of the problems met during the post-war IPPF Abortion Programme. Proceedings of the Medical Association for the Prevention of War, Volume 2, Part 7, 173–187.