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Female Circumcision -- 90 percent of Childbearing Women in Egypt?

UNITED NATIONS - The good news is that female circumcism - also known as female
genital mutilation or cutting --has decreased in a number of nations. The bad news is that
the figures are still shocking after years of campaigns.

The practice of cutting into female organs is prevalent in a number of countries in Africa,
the Middle East and south Asia as well as among migrant families in Europe and the
United States. Female Genital Mutilation/Cutting (FGM/C) is usually carried out between
infancy and 15 years of age to keep women "pure," marriageable and unable to enjoy sex.
Consequences include severe bleeding, childbirth complications, and of course pain.

The latest figures, released by the UN Population Fund (UNFPA) and the UN Children's
Fund (UNICEF), show that over 6,000 communities have chosen to abandon the practice
in Ethiopia, Egypt, Kenya, Senegal, Burkina Faso, the Gambia, Guinea and Somalia.

But.. there is always a but...


In Ethiopia, the prevalence rate has fallen from 80 per cent to 74 per cent, in Kenya from
32 per cent to 27 per cent, and in Egypt from 97 per cent to 91 per cent, according to
Nfissatou Diop, coordinator of the program. The prevalence rate is based on a
representative sample, not a door-to-door census.

In other words, this means 91 percent of Egyptian females aged 15-49 years old may
have been circumcised, most of them when they were young and could not protect
themselves. The surveys are conducted by the U.S.-based Macro International every 5-6
years.

So, does that mean that most of the spirited young woman demonstrators and bloggers we
have seen on TV have lost control over their bodies? Or do they belong to the lucky 10
percent?

The practice is outlawed in Egypt although hardly anyone has been prosecuted. The now-
former first lady, Suzanne Mubarak, called female circumcision "a flagrant example of
continued physical and psychological violence against children which must stop." Last
May 1, she appeared at Aswan City alongside local officials to declare the province free
of it. Hopefully the ouster of the Mubarak family will not result in a backlash on this
issue.

Three million girls face FGM/C every year in Africa and worldwide, and up to 140
million women and girls have already undergone the practice, the UN agencies report.

Among the nations practicing female circumcism are 28 countries in Africa and the
Middle East, including Iraq's Kurdistan area. The procedure has also been reported
among certain populations in India, Indonesia and Malaysia. Many countries have
enacted laws against FGM: 19 in Africa (Benin, Burkina Faso, Chad, Ivory Coast,
Djibouti, Egypt, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Ghana, Guinea, Kenya, Mauritania, Niger, Senegal,
South Africa, Tanzania, Togo, Uganda, Zambia); 11 in Europe (Austria, Belgium,
Cyprus, Denmark, Italy, Luxembourg, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Britain). And
the United States, Australia, Canada and New Zealand also have legislation against FGM.

But enforcing them is as difficult as the Pope's ban on birth control.

Waris Dirie speaks


One of the most famous advocates against FGM was Waris Dirie of Somalia, a model,
actress and human rights activist. She has spoken and written about how her mother held
her down when she was cut, without anesthesia, by a gypsy woman. Her vaginal opening
was stitched closed with thorns. "Can you imagine anything worse than hearing the
screams of pain of your own child?" she asks. She trekked across Somalia

The International Organization for Migration advocates work among immigrants.


"Traditional practices don't die when a migrant's boat or plane journey ends. With its
partners, IOM is committed to eliminating FGM within a generation. However, this will
only happen if practicing migrant communities are fully included in efforts to end FGM,"
said IOM Director General William Lacy Swing.

Many religious leaders, both Muslims and Christians, say the practice is not related to
religion but has been a part of tradition for hundreds if not thousands of years. But a
World Health Organization-funded study a year ago found that there are contradictory
messages from religious scholars and sheiks. The nagging question is how mothers and
fathers can continue the painful practice, generation after generation.

Incontinence and maternal mortality are among the health hazards of female circumcism.
Yet the new U.S. Congress, in an apparent fixation on practices below the waist, is eager
to cut any funds to Planned Parenthood. No doubt UNFPA will be next as it was in the
Bush administration.

The argument is denouncing any mention of abortion, although that is a rare discussion in
developing nations. Abstinence is frequently advocated rather than birth control. Yet
UNFPA estimates that 215 million women in the developing world want to delay or
avoid pregnancy but have no access to contraception. For circumcised women, the choice
of whether to have another child is an especially poignant question.

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