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ERITREA: Campaign against
FGM ‘is working'
14 February 2007-(IRIN) The Eritrean government
and civil society have expressed optimism that efforts to combat
female genital mutilation (FGM) were bearing fruit, saying the campaign
against the practice was gaining support in rural villages where
excision was most common.
"We do not have the statistics yet, but we
have seen a positive response, with even village councils coming
up with their own provisional laws with the people's consensus to
discourage the practice," Dehab Suleiman, the head of information
and research at the National Union of Eritrean Women (NUEW), told
IRIN on Wednesday. A national law was also being drafted to outlaw
FGM in Eritrea, she said.
At a function to mark Anti-Female Circumcision
Day on 6 February, Eritrea's Health Minister Saleh Meki had said
the campaign against FGM was showing encouraging results.
Suleiman said FGM prevalence rates in Eritrea were
estimated at 94 percent, but the practice was expected to decline
in the near future because an increasing number of parents were
choosing not to have their daughters subjected to FGM. "Even
some circumcisers are now giving up the practice and are joining
us to educate the people about the harmful effects of FGM,"
she said.
FGM involves the cutting and/or removal of the
clitoris and other vaginal tissue, often under unsanitary conditions.
It is practised in at least 28 countries globally. The United Nations
Children's Fund (UNICEF) estimates that up to 140 million girls
and women around the world have undergone some form of FGM.
It is practised extensively in Africa, and also
in parts of the Middle East and among immigrant communities around
the world. According to medical experts, it causes physical and
psychological complications, as well as heightening the risk of
HIV/AIDS, especially when dirty instruments are used.
Human rights activists have put pressure on governments
to legislate against FGM. At least 16 African countries have banned
the practice, and the Maputo Protocol, an African regional document
that prohibits and condemns FGM, came into force in November 2005.
From: http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=70174
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