I assume this is not online, but it sounds like a reprint of a story that was in the New York Times quite a while ago.
See
www.nytimes.com/2008/01/20/magazine/20circumcision-t.html
www.viiphoto.com/detailStory3.php?news_id=676
The thing that gets me is they make all this noise about it, but male circumcision gets no mention.
If you read the story above, it goes on about FGM, and casually adds
" Over the course of that Sunday morning, more than 200 girls were circumcised, many of them appearing to be under the age of 5. Meanwhile, in a nearby building, more than 100 boys underwent a traditional circumcision as well.
"
The 'Meanwhile' sentence is the only mention of male circumcision. Which to me is absurd, given that male circumcision is the removal of the entire male prepuce, and is in fact a far more severe procedure than that usually practised in Indonesia, which is one of the following:
- incision (cutting, but not removing) of the clitoral prepuce
- excision (cutting off) part of the clitoral prepuce
- pricking the clitoris with a needle
- rubbing the clitoris in a symbolic fashion
- removing part of the clitoris
It appears that the most common procedure is cutting off part (but not all) of the clitoral prepuce (hood) (analagous to removal of the foreskin in male circumcision). It should be considered that this operation is sometimes done as an elective procedure by women to heighten pleasure
www.vibereview.com/how_to/clitoral_hood_removal_new_ways_of_heightening_arousal
While I'm certainly not endorsing female circumcision as it is practised in Indonesia, the hypocrisy of the NY Times condemning it while turning a blind eye to male circumcision (which is clearly more damaging to men than the form of female circumcision practised in Indoensia), simply because male circumcision is a common practise in mainstream American culture, is clear.
The other issue of course is that FGM as practised in some parts of the world is certainly horrific - as it is practised in Indonesia, however, it is not.