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ALTERNATIVES TO FEMALE GENITAL
MUTILATION IN GUINEA-BISSAU
January 22, 2002 (afrol News) "Sinim
Mira Nassigue" means, "we think about the future,"
and it also means the hope of avoiding female genital mutilation
for an increasing number of young women in Guinea-Bissau. The non-governmental
organisation is presenting alternative rites to traditional rural
societies.
Engaged Guinean women and men with a very limited funding established
Sinim Mira Nassigue a few years ago. It now has established support
centres in Buba, Gabú and Massabá, where its members
daily go from house to house to sensitise the communities about
the harmful consequences of female genital mutilation (FGM).
- Mothers believe they cannot marry off their daughters otherwise,
says Maria Augusta Baldé, founder of the organisation. According
to some local traditions, uncut women are not even clean enough
to prepare food.
Mrs Baldé earns her living from her job in the Ministry of
Health, but her spare time is devoted to Sinim Mira Nassigue, which
is not able to pay salaries to its volunteers. The workload is tough,
but it pays off in practical results.
The organisation recently supervised a "fanado modelo",
an alternative initiation rite for 35 young girls. All traditional
parts of the ceremony were followed and the girls left the scene
accepted as pure, but without being mutilated.
Speaking to the 'Berliner Zeitung' recently, Mrs Baldé told
the German daily how they invite the girls, the women who perform
the cut and a drummer. "Than, all what belongs to the ancient
initiation rites happens, but the body remains untouched,"
Mrs Baldé said. "Knifes and blades are banned. One has
to preserve the cultural aspect and get rid of the brutal part,"
she concluded.
The organisation emphasises on the importance of including the "fanatecas"
(the female circumcisers) in the process. These women have strong
commercial interests in maintaining the practice and it would be
unwise and unfair to deprive them of their income and high social
status. Further, the fanatecas play other important social roles,
such as the passing of women's traditions and experiences through
their large network. When the fanatecas start supervising the alternative
rites, these will be even more easily spread and the tradition bearers
are assured of their future income, the organisation maintains.
The debate on FGM only started in the early 1980s in Guinea-Bissau,
as in neighbouring countries, and was an "imported" issue.
International gender and human rights organisations, together with
UN agencies, pinpointed the issue, which soon became an issue of
public debate, at least in urban areas. Actionism started with the
National Committee for the Elimination of Harmful Practices against
Women and Children, which was set up by the government in the early
1990s.
In 1995, a government proposal to outlaw FGM was defeated in parliament,
but practitioners were to be held criminally responsible if a woman
dies as a result of FGM. As the Guinean government has shown little
interest in following up the fight against FGM, Sinim Mira Nassigue
has developed into the main driving force in this fight.
Although the practice is widespread in Guinea-Bissau, its prevalence
and forms are different from area to area and from people to people.
Amnesty International has estimated than around half of the Guinean
women undergo FGM, both clitoridectomy and excision. In areas inhabited
by the Fula and Mandinka people, FGM prevalence reaches up to 80
percent. In urban areas, however, the prevalence has now dropped
to 20-30 percent.
Sinim Mira Nassigue also finds it easier to campaign against FGM
in urban areas, as the issue is well known there and a majority
rejects the practice. Most urban men and women see the practice
as barbaric and outdated.
In rural areas, the situation is different. Little information about
the health risks and the religious framework has reached out to
Guinean villages. A recent study by the Austrian Society for Family
Planning (ASFP) concluded that especially rural women in Guinea-Bissau
still had strong arguments for exposing their daughters to the harmful
cut.
Guinean women told ASFP the principal justification for going on
with FGM were moral or religious; maintaining virginity; bride prices
or family honour; anatomic/aesthetic reasons; need for social integration;
preventing child mortality; and hygienic reasons.
A group of women from Guinea-Bissau told ASFP; "As good Muslims
we must be circumcised. In that way we will be ensured to have a
proper Muslim burial ceremony. As wives, we need to be cleaned by
the circumcision ritual in order to be able to prepare food for
our husbands."
Especially among the Fula and Mandinka people the popular belief
is widespread, the FGM practice is an essential part of Islam, a
point of view without any base in the Holy Koran or among the majority
of Muslim clergy. That the connection made between FGM and Islam
is unreasonable is underlined by the fact that FGM has a significantly
higher prevalence in Guinea-Bissau (where only 37 percent of the
population is Muslim) than in neighbouring Senegal (85 percent Muslims).
Informing about these misconceptions in rural Guinea-Bissau is the
biggest challenge of Sinim Mira Nassique. Activists visit villages;
talk to local clerics, village elder's councils and single families.
"Step by step it becomes possible to analyse the problem of
FGM, examine religious and medical justifications and talk about
the alternatives," the group explains its work.
An activist tells that "many young women do not see any connection
between their circumcision and later medical complications ... and
sexual problems," thus concluding that the information work
is an enormous task.
Mostly, rural men, including religious leaders, are open to the
input received from the activists and are shocked by learning about
the health risks attached to FGM. Rural women are often more difficult
to win for the task, mistrusting young men's intentions and believing
their daughters will not become married. It was only by presenting
an alternative ritual that Sinim Mira Nassigue started noting successes
among rural mothers.
Mrs Baldé believes the campaigns are bearing fruit, and the
recent "fanados modelos" supervised by her group demonstrate
they are on the right path. They however still hope for better funding
and more active support from the government. That government support
makes a great difference is demonstrated in neighbouring Senegal.
Action against FGM in general has been more vigorous in Senegal,
and Senegalese President Wade himself in October last year launched
a campaign to "eliminate the practice in the country within
the next four years." The campaign was presented in Tambacounda,
close to the border with Guinea-Bissau, one of the few areas in
Senegal where FGM is widely practiced.
Meanwhile, the Guinean government only gives some limited support
to groups conducting educational seminars and publicity on FGM.
Its own actions against the practice have been virtually non-existent
the last years, in contrast to Senegal and in contrast to Mrs Baldé's
group.
Sources: Based on RDP, Sinim Mira Nassigue through Weltfriedensdienst,
ASFP, Amnesty, Berliner Zeitung, UNFPA and afrol archives
From: http://www.afrol.com/ms_index.htm
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