Stop Violence Against Women


Female Genital Mutilation


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"I was genitally mutilated at the age of ten. When the operation began, I put up a big fight. The pain was terrible and unbearable... I was badly cut and lost blood... I was genitally mutilated with a blunt penknife. After the operation, no one was allowed to aid me to walk... Sometimes I had to force myself not to urinate for fear of the terrible pain. I was not given any anesthetic in the operation to reduce my pain, nor any antibiotics to fight against infection. Afterwards, I hemorrhaged and became anemic. This was attributed to witchcraft. I suffered for a long time from acute vaginal infections." - Hannah Koroma, Sierra Leone

Background


Why FGM is practiced


How FGM reinforces gender stratification


FGM as a human rights violation


FGM and International Law


The work of NGO's to Combat FGM


"It is unacceptable that the international community remains passive in the name of a distorted vision of multiculturalism. Human behavior and cultural values, however senseless or destrutive they may appear from the personal and cultural standpoints of others, have meaning and fulfill a function for those who practice them. However, culture is not static but is in cosntant flux, adapting and reforming. People will change their behavior when they understand the hazards and indignity of harmful practices and when they realize that it is posible to give up harmful practices without giving up meaning ful aspects of their culture." - Joint statement by the World Health Organization, UN Children's Fund, and UN Population Fund