In 1967, the government established the Hindustan Latex Limited and started producing condoms. As part of this programme, oral pills and condoms were distributed for free. The distribution of condoms was also a component of the government’s “Small Family, Happy Family” campaign. When the emergency was imposed on June 25, 1975, the government changed the meaning of the family planning programme altogether. While the government continued with advertisements on All India Radio, street plays and posters to promote family planning, it also started a forced sterilization programme. With encouragement from World Bank funding, the government started a mass sterilization campaign in 1976, where about 6.2 million men underwent vasectomies in just a year; thousands also died due to botched operations after the villages were cordoned off and men were taken out for surgeries. A paper “India’s history of mass sterilization” published by the American Urological Association in May 2022, says, “Since 1976, the focus of sterilization in India has shifted to women. Some 4.5 million women undergo sterilization per year with half of the female population sterilized by the age of 35.”