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Feminism: Sex and gender discussions

6th Feb -International Day of Zero Tolerance for FGM

13 replies

PurgatoryOfPotholes · 03/02/2022 17:56

As the title says. I'd like us to really push for awareness of the day this year

OP posts:
PurgatoryOfPotholes · 03/02/2022 21:57

We can't afford not to stop FGM. Here's why.

extract

The healthcare costs of female genital mutilation, or FGM for short, are set to almost double to an annual $US 2.1 billion by 2047, unless the practice is abandoned completely, reveals a World Health Organization modeling study, based on 27 countries and published in the open access journalBMJ Global Health.

Without sustained intervention, the numbers of women and girls affected will follow population growth trends, rising to an estimated 205.8 million a year by then in these countries—up from 119.4 million in 2018—suggest the projections.

The findings come ahead ofInternational Day of Zero Tolerance for Female Genital Mutilationon February 6, an annual day designated by the UN General Assembly in 2012 to hasten the end of this practice.

Globally, 200 million women and girls alive today are estimated to have been affected by FGM, which is recognized as a clear violation of human rights and an extreme form of gender discrimination.

The immediate health risks include heavy bleeding, shock, extreme pain, genital swelling, infections, urinary complications and poor wound healing. Longer term consequences can include reproductive system complications, sexual dysfunction, and psychological harms.

Abandonment of the practice by 2030 is included in target 5.3 of the Sustainable Development Goals, agreed by the UN General Assembly in 2015. But progress against this target is variable, and few studies have looked at the financial toll FGM takes, while those that have, have focused on the associated obstetriccosts.

medicalxpress.com/news/2022-02-healthcare-fgm-annual-billion.html

OP posts:
PurgatoryOfPotholes · 03/02/2022 22:37

UNICEF's Press Release for the Day of Zero Tolerance of FGM

NEW YORK, 3 February 2022–Millions of girls are at increased risk of female genital mutilation as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. Shuttered schools, lockdowns and disruption to services that protect girls from this harmful practice mean an additional 2 million cases may occur over the next decade.

“We are losing ground in the fight to end female genital mutilation, with dire consequences for millions of girls where the practice is most prevalent,” said Nankali Maksud, UNICEF Senior Advisor, Prevention of Harmful Practices. “When girls are not able to access vital services, schools and community networks, their risk of female genital mutilation significantly increases – threatening their health, education and future. As we mark International Day of Zero Tolerance for Female Genital Mutilation and approach two years of the pandemic, we must recommit to concerted and well-funded action to get back on track and end the practice everywhere.”

Female genital mutilation is a violation of girls’ rights and can lead to serious health complications and even death. Girls subjected to female genital mutilation are at increased risk of child marriage and dropping out of school, threatening their ability to build a better future for themselves, their families and their communities.

According to latest available data:

• At least 200 million girls and women alive today have undergone female genital mutilation. An additional 2 million girls could be at risk by 2030 due to COVID-19, resulting in a 33 per cent reduction in the progress toward ending this harmful practice.

•An alarming trend is emerging. Around 1 in 4 girls and women who have undergone female genital mutilation, or 52 million worldwide, were subjected to the practice at the hands of a health personnel. This proportion is twice as high among adolescents, indicating growth in the medicalization of the practice.

•Of 31 countries with available data on female genital mutilation, 15 countries are already grappling with conflict, rising poverty and inequality, creating a crisis within a crisis for the world’s most vulnerable and marginalized girls.

•In some countries, female genital mutilation is still almost universal with around 90 per cent of girls in Djibouti, Guinea, Mali and Somalia affected.

•In about half of countries, female genital mutilation is increasingly performed at younger ages, narrowing the window of opportunity to intervene. For example, in Kenya, the average age of undergoing the practice has dropped from age 12 to age 9 in the past three decades.

Progress is possible. Today, girls are a third less likely to be subjected to female genital mutilation compared to three decades ago; however, progress needs to be at least 10 times faster to meet the global target of elimination by 2030. Multiple overlapping crises, including COVID-19, rising poverty, inequality and conflict, are putting millions of girls at increased risk of female genital mutilation.

In the last two decades, the proportion of girls and women in high-prevalence countries who oppose the practice has doubled.

Ensuring girls’ access to education, healthcare and employment is critical to accelerating the elimination of female genital mutilation and allowing girls to contribute to equitable social and economic development.

www.unicef.org/press-releases/international-day-zero-tolerance-female-genital-mutilation-unicef-warns-covid-19

OP posts:
PurgatoryOfPotholes · 04/02/2022 08:15

Practical ideas for this year's day of zero tolerance!

Gardening for Hibo Wardere! She's raising money for an initiative right now.

quote from crowdfunder

I've started an organisation called *Educate Not Mutilate (more details on that to follow!) with my friend Faiza and our first project will be holding awareness workshops for pupils, teachers and parents in schools across the Boroughs with the highest prevalence of FGM in London:

These are some of the most impoverished areas of London, where schools are bogged down with many social problems and tight budgets. That's why I'm hoping we can raise £5,000 to run free education workshops for already overstretched schools. This will help protect girls and young women from FGM while also starting to change the attitudes that allow this harmful practice to happen.

My tried and tested teaching format, which is inline with the educational curriculum, will address the following:

Students and parents
Types of FGM
Open discussion:
Is it religious?
Is it cultural?
Is it abuse
Short video
Q&A

Professionals.
Teachers.
Students.
Parents.
Health implications
Prevalence, the context and rise of FGM
Risk indicators / safeguarding
Mandatory reporting duty
Support pathways
Exploring concerns with and supporting students

"About me"

I, Hibo Wardere, am an educator and campaigner against female genital mutilation (FGM). I experienced FGM in Somalia as a six year-old girl and understood from a young age that what had happened to me was deeply wrong. I later made her way to the UK as a refugee and embarked on a journey to educate myself and ultimately others, about FGM – the reason it happens and its impact on women and wider society. What I found was child abuse, deeply rooted in many cultures, often carried out in the name of religion and protected by Western societies that don’t want to interfere. My mission is to liberate the women and girls who have been harmed and are at risk of this practice by bringing an end to FGM.

*Educate Not Mutilate is currently a Constituted Community Group, soon be registered as a Charity

Follow this to get to the crowdfunder
twitter.com/HiboWardere/status/1489388442043703299?t=tu-Uog9cgfRjjbt3G2JX4Q&s=19

OP posts:
ThoseFestiveLights · 04/02/2022 08:21

Love Hibo! Thanks for raising this.

PurgatoryOfPotholes · 06/02/2022 23:19

Justin Trudeau comments

OTTAWA, ON,Feb. 6, 2022/CNW/ - The Prime Minister,Justin Trudeau, today issued the following statement on the International Day of Zero Tolerance for Female Genital Mutilation:

"Today, on theInternational Day of Zero Tolerance for Female Genital Mutilation, we come together to condemn this human rights violation that threatens the physical and mental health and well-being of women and girls around the world.

"Female genital mutilation/cutting (FGM/C) is a harmful practice conducted for non–medical reasons. Over 200 million women and girls are survivors of FGM/C, and it is estimated that millions more are vulnerable to undergoing FGM/C every year.Canadafirmly and unequivocally denounces FGM/C. Since 1997,Canada'sCriminal Codehas explicitly recognized the practice as a form of aggravated assault. It is illegal, and any individual who performs or helps with the practice, including those who take a child abroad for the practice, can be criminally charged.

"The COVID-19 pandemic has hindered some of the progress made to date in ending this violent practice. The United Nations (UN) also estimates that two million additional girls are at risk of undergoing FGM/C by 2030 as a result of the impacts of the pandemic. The ongoing health strain posed by COVID–19 has also limited the ability of advocacy programs and social services to provide access to sexual and reproductive health care for women and girls.

(continues)

"On this day, we reaffirm our steadfast commitment to end FGM/C. No woman or girl should ever live in fear of physical or psychological harm that threatens her well-being and violates her human rights.Canadawill continue to promote and protect the sexual and reproductive health and rights of women and girls. By advocating for gender equality, we will continue to build a safer, fairer, and brighter future for everyone."

Continues: www.yahoo.com/now/statement-prime-minister-international-day-144500507.html

OP posts:
thinkingaboutLangCleg · 07/02/2022 00:49

Thanks for telling us about this, OP.

Hibo Wardere is a Star.

0ttoline · 07/02/2022 07:12

Thanks for this OP. I didn't know about Hebo's project and have supported it now. What a brilliant woman.

Whatwouldscullydo · 07/02/2022 07:21

Thanks fir this.

Have donated to her before but I shall make another donation!

Shes fab

PurgatoryOfPotholes · 07/02/2022 11:41

Hibo says on twitter:

#nofgm thank you so much fir the donations. Look at this almost there
Please keep supporting

twitter.com/HiboWardere/status/1490430672355442696?t=VWtiZAn1PA6YscYm82cU_w&s=19

72% of the way to goal now.

OP posts:
RufustheFloralmissingreindeer · 07/02/2022 11:43

72% of the way to goal now

Awesome news

LilithOfEden · 07/02/2022 11:50

Thanks for the heads up, OP, I am off to donate too, Hibo is an amazing woman.

(Justin Trudeau - or The Duplicitous Ken Doll, as I've heard him described - must spend his entire existence in a state of cognitive dissonance.)

NonnyMouse1337 · 07/02/2022 11:59

Thanks for starting this thread, OP. Very pleased that Hibo Wardere's crowdfunder is doing well. Hope it smashes it's target and goes further than planned.

PurgatoryOfPotholes · 11/02/2022 21:59

Guardian article from yesterday, by anti-FGM campaigner Agnes Pareyio

I was 14 when my mother and grandmother announced that I was going to have my clitoris, my labia majora and my labia minora cut out. They said that if I resisted I was a coward. In my culture, the worst thing you can be called is a coward.

I was never naive. I grew up as a Maasai girl in Kenya in the 60s and 70s. At some point in my childhood, I became aware that there was a rite of passage into womanhood. I was to have my vulva mutilated by an elderly woman using a blunt instrument. But I was also part of the first generation of Maasai girls to be sent to school, where I met girls from communities who didn’t practisefemale genital mutilation(FGM). I learned from them that you can grow to be an adult with your vulva intact. That was what I wanted.

I went back to my family and explained I would not be mutilated. My father sided with me: he said it was not necessary. But the village taunted me and said they did not know what to call me if I was not cut: “Would we call you a girl or a woman? Do you want to remain a child all your life? Whom will you marry?”

On the day I was mutilated, I was woken up at three in the morning and taken outside, naked, because the villagers believed that if I felt the morning breeze on my body it would cool me and I would bleed less. I saw that the object they would cut me with was not sharp. I was not offered any anaesthesia, but I was told not to cry – your father is in the house, they said, and he should never hear you cry.

I was determined to show I was not a coward, so I tried very hard not to show any emotion. As a result, I was cut deeper and I could not stop bleeding. I drifted in and out of consciousness and I was extremely dizzy when I woke up.

What replaces your vulva after FGM is extreme scar tissue. I was forbidden from putting my legs together, since the scar tissue could fuse. They tied my legs apart with rope so that they would not touch, even when I slept. I had to remain like that for days as I healed.

(Continues)

We explained that vaginas are sufficiently elastic to squeeze out a baby – but scar tissue cannot stretch in the same way. When a woman tries to push a baby through this scarring, the baby often becomes trapped and is deprived of oxygen. As a result, a disproportionate number of children from communities that practise FGM are brain damaged. We told people that this would be much less likely to happen if we stopped FGM.

We continue to run education programmes and workshops, talking not only to women, but also men. If we do not persuade men – and teach them to love their women and their bodies – we cannot win.

V-Day, the precursor organisation to One Billion Rising, helped me to set up a safe house for girls and young women who refused to be mutilated. I have run it for almost 20 years. When I began this work, some people reacted with fury. There were times when I was afraid for my safety.

Not long ago, I got a call from a woman who told me of a young girl who wanted to resist cutting, but was being forced by her parents. By the time I arrived, she had been buried in a shallow grave after bleeding to death. I made sure the police investigated. Her father is now serving nine years in prison for manslaughter – but I know we need to do more.

(Continues)

I am one part of a global struggle – one that unites the 1 billion women across the planet who have been beaten, raped or mutilated. I invite you to join us.

Agnes Pareyio is an activist forOne Billion Rising
www.onebillionrising.org/

Read the article:
www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2022/feb/10/living-in-a-womans-body-i-was-mutilated-and-i-swore-i-would-stop-this-happening-to-another-girl

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