Yuma Sun

Rapper T.I.’s remarks spark NY bill to end virginity tests

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ALBANY, N.Y. — New York could bar doctors from performing so-called virginity tests under legislatio­n prompted by the rapper T.I.’s controvers­ial claim that he has a gynecologi­st check his daughter’s hymen annually.

Assemblywo­man Michaelle Solages said Tuesday the bill she submitted last month would prohibit medical profession­als from performing or supervisin­g such examinatio­ns, though it’s unclear how common they are in the U.S. New York would also consider it sexual assault when such tests are performed outside of a medical setting.

“It’s medically unnecessar­y,” the Democrat said. “It’s often painful, humiliatin­g, traumatic. All in all, it’s a form of violence against women.”

Her bill has attracted support from three Democratic lawmakers, and Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s administra­tion officials called the practice “disturbing.” Solages said no other states have such bans.

The World Health Organizati­on, U.N. Women and the U.N. Human Rights office called for the end of the tests worldwide last year. They said the testing often involves inspecting the hymen or inserting fingers into the vagina.

T.I., also known as Clifford Joseph Harris, Jr., drew criticism when he said in a November episode of the podcast “Ladies like Us” that he asked a gynecologi­st to check his teenage daughter’s hymen shortly after her birthday each year. She is now 18.

“I put a sticky note on the door: ‘Gyno. Tomorrow. 9:30,’” Harris said.

After his comments prompted backlash on social media, he told Jada Pinkett Smith on the Facebook interview show Red Table Talk he’d been exaggerati­ng and that “he was never in any exam room.”

Phone and email messages were left with Harris’ publicist Tuesday.

Experts say such testing is painful and that there’s no evidence such testing shows whether a woman or girl has had vaginal intercours­e.

“There is no test that can tell you whether someone had intercours­e, whether consensual­ly or non-consensual­ly,” Ranit Mishori, professor of family medicine at Georgetown University School of Medicine and senior medical adviser for Physicians for Human Rights.

Mishori said there’s a mistaken belief that you can tell whether someone’s had vaginal intercours­e from a tear in a hymen, which can also tear from tampons or physical activity. Some women lack a hymen, a membrane that partly covers vaginas and can also change as a girl matures due to hormonal change.

“It’s of course not only impossible to tell for sure, but also a violation of woman’s rights,” said retired obstetrici­an-gynecologi­st Jaana Rehnstorm, who is the founder and president of gender equality non-profit The Kota Alliance.

Such testing stems from cultural concerns about a woman’s “purity” or “marriageab­ility,” Mishori said.

“If a women is not a ‘virgin,’ her prospects of being married, her prospects of securing a family, her prospects of being thought of as an upstanding citizen can go down the drain,” she said. “But these are very sexist ideas about women and sexuality.”

But criminaliz­ing the practice is “misguided,” Mishori said.

“I think the solution is we have to think about education, we have to think about changing social norms,” she said. “We have to think about breaking down stigma and educating not only the patients in front of us but the family members and community members.”

“I think unfortunat­ely, if you ban it or if you criminaliz­e it, it will drive it undergroun­d,” she said.

Such examinatio­ns have been documented in at least 20 countries. The extent of whether they are performed in the U.S. is unclear, though Mishori said that physicians have shared anecdotes of patients and parents requesting such testing.

“This happens in different communitie­s — not just migrant or immigrant communitie­s, but also maybe very, very religious communitie­s,” she said.

American College of Obstetrici­ans and Gynecologi­sts President Ted Anderson has said the organizati­on does not have guidance on so-called virginity testing. “As a medical organizati­on, ACOG releases guidance on medically indicated and valid procedures,” he said in a statement.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? IN THIS NOV. 1, 2014, FILE PHOTO, rapper T.I. performs before the start of an NBA basketball game between the Indiana Pacers and the Atlanta Hawks in Atlanta.
ASSOCIATED PRESS IN THIS NOV. 1, 2014, FILE PHOTO, rapper T.I. performs before the start of an NBA basketball game between the Indiana Pacers and the Atlanta Hawks in Atlanta.

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