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An End to Female Genital Cutting?
January 4, 2008 – (Time) These are busy times
for Pakhshan Zangana. Head of the women's caucus in the Iraqi Kurdish
parliament in Arbil, she is on the verge of pushing through a piece
of legislation that is the first of its kind in the Middle East
— a law criminalizing female genital mutilation (FGM).
"Sixty-eight out of 120 deputies signed our
bill, so we could have got it passed by ministerial decree,"
Zangana says. "But law-making is the job of parliament, and
we want everybody to debate this issue openly." The bill received
its first reading on Dec. 3 and is likely to be passed by February.
Affecting up to 90% of women in Egypt, Sudan and Somalia, FGM is
widely seen as an African phenomenon. But it also happens to a lesser
extent throughout the Middle East, particularly in Yemen, Saudi
Arabia, Jordan and Iraq.
If the Iraqi Kurds are leading the way today, it
is partially thanks to a handful of local women's organizations
that have struggled for greater awareness of the issue since the
early 1990s. But the real breakthrough came in 2005 when WADI, a
German non-governmental organization, published the results of its
survey of 39 villages in the Germian region, east of Kirkuk.
Of 1,554 women and girls aged older than 10 interviewed
by WADI's local medical team, over 60% said they had undergone the
operation. Larger surveys completed since show the practice is prevalent
among local Arabs and Turkmen, as well as Kurds. The surveys provide
the first solid statistics on a tradition which — while practiced
relatively openly in parts of Africa — is so veiled in secrecy
here that brothers are often unaware their own sisters are affected.
A farmer's wife in Zurkan, a remote village close
to the Iranian border in northeastern Iraqi Kurdistan, Amina Khidir
began performing the operation when her mother became too old to
carry on. Her first patient was her own daughter. "I didn't
feel nervous, because I had spent years watching how the cut was
done," Khidir remembers. "And my daughter was a baby at
the time, too small to understand what was happening. That's the
best age to do it." Matter-of-factly, Khidir describes dealing
with the aftermath of her work. She applies oak charcoal to reduce
pain, cold water and antiseptic solution to reduce the risk of infection.
Asked about the specifics of the procedure, she covers her face
with her loosely worn headscarf. "I cut about a quarter off,"
she says. It's a reference to the so-called 'Sunna' circumcision,
the removal of prepuce and sometimes clitoris that some Muslims
attribute to a tradition taught by the Prophet Mohammed.
"According to the Shafi'i school [of Islamic
law] to which we Kurds belong, circumcision is obligatory for both
men and women," explains Mohamed Ahmed Gaznei, chief cleric
in the city of Sulaimaniyah, Iraqi Kurdistan's second city. "The
Hanbali [school] says it is obligatory only for men." Personally
opposed to female circumcision, Gaznei in 2002 issued a fatwa, or
religious edict, calling for imitation of Hanbali practice. He has
since appeared on a short film about FGM shot by a Kurdish filmmaker
that WADI medical teams now take with them when visiting villages.
"Look, they even got Osama bin Laden to talk,"
quips Gula Hama Amin, one of 30 women watching the film in Nura,
a village 100 miles north of Sulaimaniyah, referring to Gaznei's
luxuriant beard. The others tell her to quiet down. All have been
circumcised for reasons hovering somewhere between religious belief
and tradition: locals say the food an uncircumcised woman cooks
is unclean, or that the operation makes a girl more affectionate
to her family.
So great was the taboo surrounding FGM until recently
that even the Iraqi Kurdish authorities, largely supportive of campaigns
against it, have sometimes been tentative in their resolve to take
action. Since 14,000 people signed an April 2007 petition for a
law against FGM, though, the mood has changed radically. Both the
region's main parties have given their blessing to the law, and
FGM is now openly discussed by the local media. Back in parliament,
Pakhshan Zangana knows the law represents only the end of the beginning
of this struggle. Her aim now, she says, is to end FGM in Iraqi
Kurdistan within five years. "A law on its own can't do that,"
Zangana says. "What can is full cooperation between government
departments, and people like me, in parliament, making sure the
law is enforced."
From: http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1700191,00.html
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