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Djibouti: Women fight mutilation
Jul 12, 2005 (IRIN) - For thousands of years, girls
in the area that is now the tiny African country of Djibouti, have
been subjected to pharaonic circumcision.
It is a practice that involves cutting away a girls inner
labia and clitoris, and sewing the wound together, leaving a tiny
hole for passing urine and menstrual blood.
Siti Robitu, 21, describes a recent argument she had with her family
over the circumcision of her four-year old daughter. "My father,
my mother - they all cried," she said. "They wanted my
daughter to be circumcised. I was against it."
Siti, a nursing aid in a local clinic, belongs to a small number
of mothers in Djibouti who are trying to protect their daughters
from the circumcisers knife.
Despite medical evidence that genital mutilation puts women at risk
of infection, pain and complications during childbirth, social pressure
is such that most mothers opt to circumcise their daughters.
"At first, I asked the doctor to do it, but he refused,"
Siti said. "My mother was furious. When you are not circumcised,
the whole neighbourhood talks behind your back. They say she [my
daughter] is like a white woman."
Djiboutis health ministry estimates that 98 percent of all
Djiboutian women are circumcised - the highest rate of any country
in the world.
"Mothers have their daughters infibulated to make sure that
they get a husband and a secure future. Otherwise they get loose
and become prostitutes, people believe here," Fatuma Abdi,
from the Djibouti National Womens Union (UNDF) explained.
"It is the women not the men who insist on circumcision,"
she added. "The weird thing is that my mother believes she
has benefited from it. How, she can't tell me."
Siti is encouraged by activists like Fatuma Abdi not to follow age-old
tradition.
Door to door campaigns, programmes on government radio and roundtable
television shows bring the new message into every home.
Teachers are obliged to talk about the issue for at least five minutes
a day, so girls do not perpetuate in adulthood what may have already
been done to them.
It has been a long, hard struggle for Djiboutian women activists
to get this far.
QUARTER CENTURY OF STRUGGLE
Twenty-six years ago, members of the women's union started the fight
against female genital mutilation (FGM). The breakthrough came only
early this year after a decade-long series of conferences and meetings
with religious leaders.
Safia Elmi, technical advisor to the Ministry of Health, recalls
the outcry of more than 200 women in a conference hall on 2 February,
when Muslim Imams conceded that female circumcision was not required
by the Koran.
Nonetheless, they demanded that women still have at least their
clitoris cut.
"That was the best thing that happened to us," Safia says.
"We all stood up and shouted - 'dont touch our girls'."
The Minister of Health was forced to call another closed session
with clergymen. They finally declared female circumcision a thing
of the past.
This, however, was just on paper.
FGM was made a criminal offence in Djibouti as far back as 1994,
incurring a penalty of one million Djbouti francs (US $5,500), or
up to two years imprisonment.
"But until now, nobody was jailed or fined because it is difficult
to fine someone for a cultural practice that is very widespread,"
said Ayanne Hassan Omar, spokeswoman for Djiboutis president,
Omar Guelleh.
FIGHT ACROSS BORDERS
Safia Elmi is establishing an organisation of midwives who oppose
FGM. She wants to track down those who carry out female circumcisions
and have them prosecuted.
Increased public censure in Djibouti, she says, means more Djiboutian
mothers are taking their daughters to Ethiopia or Somaliland to
be circumcised. To prevent this, she wants to create a regional
anti-FGM committee.
The UNDFs Fatuma Abdi says circumcision is primarily cultural,
not religious: "It is not just the Muslims who are practicing
infibulation. It is the Catholics as well."
In December 2003, Djibouti signed the Maputo Protocol of the African
Charter of Rights, which stipulates that FGM must be forbidden and
condemned.
This did not stop the average mother from subjecting her daughter
to it.
"The real reason why nobody was punished, is that nobody complained,"
Safia Elmi said. "In Djibouti, everybody is a cousin of someone."
PAIN AND SUFFERING
Madina Mohammed, a mother of five, lives in a very poor Djibouti
neighbourhood. She proudly describes how her daughter was circumcised
shortly after birth. The girl is now three years old.
"It needs three women to do the procedure. One closes the eyes
of the girl. One spreads the legs and one does the cutting. Then
we tie the legs together for seven days. I spent DF50 (30 US Cents)
for Afar medicine to help the healing."
The women of the Afar ethnic group circumcise girls in the first
week after birth. The Somali Issa girls are circumcised between
five and nine years of age.
An expert circumcision costs to DF5,000 ($30). People often save
for years to get the money together for the practitioner.
MEDICAL PROBLEMS
Many circumcisions are badly carried out.
Fatma Hatchi, one of just two local gynaecologists in Djibouti,
is confronted daily with women who suffer complications stemming
from infibulation. Girls bleeding profusely are regularly admitted
to the hospital where she works.
There are other complications too. "Sometimes girls take half
an hour to urinate," she says. The urethra is closed-up during
infibulation, forcing urine inside the vagina, before it finds it
way out through the tiny hole left after circumcision.
"Today, we had a patient who could not pee anymore. When we
opened her up, we found lots of blood. The woman must have had menstruation
for a year, but it could not get out. She had pharaonic circumcision,"
Hatchi explained.
"During my time, it was important that five women from the
family inspected whether the hole was small enough," Hatchi
said. "If it was too big, even if the woman had had no contact
with a man, she was sent home and could never get married."
Siti, the health worker who refuses to circumcise her daughter,
remembers her wedding night was not what she had dreamt of. "We
tried for a whole week, but my husband could not penetrate,"
she says. "It was very painful. Then he sent me to the hospital,
to open the hole."
From: http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=48080&SelectRegion=Horn_of_Africa&SelectCountry=DJIBOUTI
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