International day on Zero Tolerance to Female Genital Mutilation

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02-06-2004, 10:22 PM

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20 عاما من العطاء و الصمود
مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
International day on Zero Tolerance to Female Genital Mutilation

    ADDIS ABABA,2/4/2004 (IRIN) - Africa is aiming to eradicate harmful
    traditional practices like female genital mutilation (FGM) by 2010,
    campaigners said on the eve on the International day on Zero Tolerance to
    Female Genital Mutilation, to be marked on Friday.

    Speaking in the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa, on Tuesday, Berhane
    Ras-Work, the president of the Inter-African Committee on Traditional
    Practices (IAC), called for a continent-wide zero-tolerance approach to
    combat FGM.

    "Children in Africa are being mutilated alive in the name of tradition,"
    she asserted. "We should not remain indifferent just because these acts
    are defined as tradition."

    African leaders have already come under pressure to outlaw the
    controversial practice. The wives of at least five African presidents have
    also thrown their weight behind the campaign to outlaw FGM. The first
    ladies, from Burkina Faso, Nigeria, Mali, Djibouti and Guinea, urged
    action to stamp out the practice, which affects some 2 million girls each
    year.

    "Female genital mutilation is the most widespread and deadly of all
    violence victimising women and girls in Africa," Chantal Compaore, the
    First Lady of Burkina Faso, said recently.

    MOVES TO BAN FGM

    The EU, for its part, has threatened action such as withdrawing aid from
    Third World countries which turn a blind eye to the practice or refuse to
    ban it.

    In Europe, concern over FGM has mounted due to the influx of refugees and
    immigrants. In 2001, the EU passed laws condemning the practice but only
    Britain, Norway, Austria and Sweden have outlawed it. It is also banned in
    the US and Canada. Britain took a stand against FGM by passing into law
    the 1985 Female Circumcision Act, but so far no one has been prosecuted
    under it.

    In Britain, the growing practice has prompted the British Medical
    Association to issue guidelines. Meanwhile, the country's National Health
    Service is paying for at least 200 operations a year to reverse FGM.

    Some 15,000 girls are believed to be at risk in Britain, where FGM is
    officially classed as child abuse. In countries like Austria offenders who
    perform the operation can be jailed for five years.

    The UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) has called on governments to impose a ban.
    It said governments had committed themselves to eradicate FGM under the
    Millennium Development Goals.

    Carol Bellamy, the UNICEF executive director, said in a recent speech that
    six of the eight major goals adopted by all UN member states in 2000
    pertained to children. "The 100 million women who endured female genital
    mutilation or cutting as young girls are living proof that the world has
    failed to protect them," she noted.

    According to statistics, between 100 million and 130 million women have
    endured FGM or cutting, often without any anaesthetic or sterilised
    instruments. Many suffer serious side effects as a result. Untrained
    women, known as excisors, often perform the brutal cutting on children,
    leaving them scarred for life, in implementation of a centuries-old
    custom. Some will use the same knife on a succession of victims,
    regardless of the dangers of spreading infections.

    The practice is ubiquitous in the Horn of Africa. In Somalia, about 98
    percent of women are estimated as having undergone FGM. It is almost as
    widespread in Ethiopia.

    In the Horn of Africa, the operation usually begins with the young girl’s
    legs being tied to two women sitting on either of her sides. A third, at
    her head, will hold down her chest and arms. The cutting will then begin.
    Thorns from acacia trees are used to stitch up the wound. A small prayer
    is then said, after which the victim is told never to tell anyone what has
    happened to her until she marries. Immediately after the operation, she is
    taken home, where her legs are strapped together for a month while the
    wound heals.

    ADVERSE EFFECTS

    Some girls, however, never make it into marriage. They either bleed to
    death or develop infections like septicaemia which can kill in a matter of
    weeks. Others end up infertile or suffering from bladder and kidney
    problems for the rest of their lives. The damage done to women as a result
    of FGM is epitomised by the fact that in the capital, Addis Ababa, an
    entire hospital is devoted to trying to repair such, often irreversible,
    damage, particularly fistula.

    According to a recent scientific study published in the International
    Journal of Gynaecology and Obstetrics, almost one in 10 women will suffer
    a stillbirth as the result of FGM.

    But the pressure on mothers within Somali communities for their daughters
    to undergo FGM is enormous. Three types of circumcision exist. The first,
    the Sunnah (Islamic tradition), is the least damaging, involving the
    removal of the tip of the clitoris. The second, excision, involves
    removing the labia minora as well as the clitoris. The third is
    infibulation, where not only the clitoris and the labia minora but also
    the labia majora are excised. In this case, a straw is inserted into the
    wound and left there temporarily to facilitate the passage of urine, after
    which the wound is stitched up.

    Infibulation, the most extreme form of FGM is also the most popular in
    Somalia. The aim of the process is believed to be to ensure the woman will
    be faithful to her future husband. Some communities consider uncircumcised
    girls ineligible for marriage circumcised.

    FGM AND HIV/AIDS

    The IAC, which is combating the practice in 26 countries, said FGM was now
    becoming a major vehicle for the transmission of HIV/AIDS. Berhane
    described FGM as a "gruesome and heinous". In Ethiopia it is estimated
    that 60 percent of its population of 65 million are victims of harmful
    traditional practices and five-sixths of these are women. Four out of five
    women aged between 15 and 49 have been circumcised.

    "Africa has the highest maternal mortality rates and the root causes for
    this sad reality lie squarely on social attitudes and practices that go
    unchallenged," Berhane said. "We need to take up the challenge and give
    priority [to] and focus on the eradication of FGM, early marriage,
    nutritional taboos, repeated and uncontrolled pregnancies, and rape," she
    stressed.

    She went on to point out that women were often subjected to harmful
    practices due to their ignorance and "economic vulnerability", stressing
    the importance of women being empowered to reject such practices. "Women
    accept in silence the partial sacrifice of their body with all the
    attendant consequences and paralysing effects. Women have been hurt for so
    long and have been victims for too long," she concluded.








                  

العنوان الكاتب Date
International day on Zero Tolerance to Female Genital Mutilation Roada02-06-04, 10:22 PM
  Re: International day on Zero Tolerance to Female Genital Mutilation إيمان أحمد02-07-04, 04:11 AM
  Re: International day on Zero Tolerance to Female Genital Mutilation nada ali02-08-04, 08:50 PM
  Re: International day on Zero Tolerance to Female Genital Mutilation Rawia02-16-04, 07:35 PM


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