(Photo: www.telegraph.co.uk)
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Female genital mutilation in Kenya, and Africa by extension,
still remains one of the worst forms of violence against women. What’s even
worse is the fact that this cruelty is being perpetrated on girls who are as
young as five years.
Although there have been increased efforts to campaign against
this vice, many girls and women in general continue to suffer in silence.
According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), at least 125
million females alive today across the world have undergone FGM. They
further estimate that about 3 million girls are at risk of undergoing
FGM every year.
According to a report
published by WHO, Africa tops the list of countries where female genital
mutilation is rampant. The report estimates that about 90% of women who undergo
FGM in countries like Nigeria, Mali, Eritrea and Ghana are below the age of
five.
This study further
indicates that FGM is widespread in countries within the Central and West
African region. But why does it still occur?
Reasons for Continued Violation
According to Hilary
Burrage, a renowned sociologist, author and blogger, female genital mutilation
is still rampant due to a number of reasons. She highlights retrogressive
traditions and beliefs as the main cause of continued violation of young girls
through FGM.
“In some communities
FGM is seen as a rite of passage, an initiation to adulthood, occurring as the
girl approaches puberty and becomes a woman,” Burrage claims.
She adds that some
communities do it as a way of preserving family honor while others see it as a
way to “cleanse” a girl. The latter reason comes from the belief that it
is more hygienic and will stop unpleasant genital secretions and odors as the
girl enters puberty.
Burrage also notes that “excision of the clitoris is
‘believed’ to reduce a woman’s sexual pleasure or desire, thus reducing the
likelihood that she will become sexually active with anyone other than her
husband.”
Efforts to Curb the Menace
In Kenya, a group of
young Maasai men better known as morans have joined in the fight against female
genital mutilation. This is seen as a significant milestone in winning the war
because FGM is a long-held tradition their community. For many years,
the Maasai morans have loathed the idea of marrying an uncircumcised woman.
Josphat, one of the
morans helping in the fight against FGM, decided to speak against the tradition
after witnessing an unsafe FGM procedure that almost ended his sister’s life:
“When my own sister,
Bella, was cut she experienced a lot of bleeding and had to go to hospital for
a week. I saw how FGM could ruin someone’s life and I thought it was important
for me to take the initiative and work to abandon the practice,” he said in an
interview with Global Citizen.
In 2011, the Kenyan parliament passed the Prohibition of
Female Genital Mutilation Act, outlawing the practice of FGM and safeguarding
against violation of a person’s mental or physical integrity through the
practice of FGM. The
Kenyan media has also been vocal in sensitizing the public on the effects of
female genital mutilation on the victim and society as a whole.
Although many girls
have been rescued from the dangers of FGM, many more still continue to suffer.
It’s the duty of all of us to stand up against the vice and say enough is
enough.
Credit: Face2Face Africa
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