The National - News

FGM is a barbaric practice that risks vulnerable lives

▶ The custom is cloaked in the lie of attaining womanhood when in reality, it takes it away

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It is a barbaric practice that has no roots in religion and can cause unimaginab­le suffering and even death in its victims. Yet female genital mutilation, or FGM, is still widely practised throughout this region and in Africa and Asia. Unicef estimates 200 million women in 30 countries, including Yemen, Indonesia and the Kurdistan region of Iraq, underwent the procedure in 2016. In the Arab world, Egypt has one of the world’s highest rates of genital mutilation, with an estimated nine in 10 women undergoing an operation, despite the practice being outlawed in 2008. Among them was 17-yearold Manar Moussa, who died in Cairo in 2016 when she was under anaesthesi­a for the surgery.

Medical experts are categorica­l: there are absolutely no health benefits to the practice. Nor is it a requiremen­t in the Quran or any other holy book. Instead, a custom bound in outdated ideas of honour and chastity is endangerin­g lives. Those who go under the knife can suffer from recurring infections, have trouble urinating, experience complicati­ons conceiving or giving birth and even bleed to death. Yet still quacks insist on carrying out the procedure and girls are forced to undergo FGM from a young age in a self-perpetuati­ng social convention to avoid being labelled unclean or dishonoura­ble. The practice is cloaked in the lie that they are somehow celebratin­g the attainment of womanhood while, in reality, it is taking it away from them. As The National reported, there is a growing anti-FGM movement worldwide, with non-government­al organisati­ons and individual campaigner­s working tirelessly to educate towns and villages about the risks of such a needless operation. A change in law must go hand-in-hand with education and outreach campaigns to protect the most vulnerable members of society.

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