Originally posted by the Voice of America.
Voice of America content is produced by the Voice of America,
a United States federal government-sponsored entity, and is in
the public domain.


Mass Migration, COVID Return FGM to Shadows, Aid Group Says

Sophia Solano

   Mass migration and the COVID-19 pandemic have contributed to the
   worldwide spread of female genital mutilation, or FGM, executed on
   girls from infancy to puberty, say aid organizations.

   Perpetrators cross borders to perform FGM in countries such as Chad,
   Liberia, Mali, Sierra Leone, Somalia and Sudan, where there is no
   legislation against the practice, according to research by [1]Community
   of Practice on FGM, (CoP-FGM) an international network.
   This map from the University of Virginia Medical School is from 2017
   and shows where FGM occurs most in the world.

   The practice dates back more than 2,000 years and is defined by the
   World Health Organization (WHO) as the partial or total removal of
   external female genitalia or other injury to the female genital
   tissues, including suturing the genitalia. Among the four levels of
   FGM, some are banned in some countries, while other types remain legal.

   "In many cases, families are aware that FGM carries a physical and
   mental health risk, but they have girls undergo FGM to increase their
   marriageability or as a way of safeguarding their chastity," said
   Nankali Maksud, senior adviser of Prevention of Harmful Practices at
   UNICEF.

   "While communities cite reasons such as religion, culture or hygiene
   for practicing FGM, the practice is a human rights violation and an
   expression of power and control over girls' and women's bodies and
   sexuality," she said.

   Despite bans, practice continues

   FGM [2]continues as a cultural practice to ensure a female's virginity
   and decrease her sexuality so she may be more controlled, according to
   Maksud.

   WHO estimates that 200 million girls and women alive today have
   undergone FGM. It has been documented in 30 countries, mostly in
   Africa, the Middle East and Asia, but growing migration due to war and
   economic adversity has increased the number of girls and women
   subjected to FGM.
   "If a country bans FGM, they'll usually ban a particular practice of
   it, so people will just do something else," said Dena Igusti, a
   24-year-old artist and activist from New York who underwent FGM in
   2006.

   "If a country bans FGM, they'll usually ban a particular practice of
   it, so people will just do something else," said Dena Igusti, 24, an
   artist and activist from New York who underwent FGM in 2006. "If that
   doesn't work, they'll go to a country that's outwardly against it, like
   Western countries. But because there isn't a focus on it, and there is
   this denial that it happens here, they get away with it."

   In early January, the United States tightened its ban on FGM
   nationally, and it is explicitly banned in 39 states. The U.S. Centers
   for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that more than 500,000
   women and girls have undergone or are at risk of undergoing FGM in the
   U.S.

   In all member states of the European Union, FGM is criminalized. But
   six African nations -- Chad, Liberia, Mali, Sierra Leone, Somalia and
   Sudan -- have no laws against FGM, CoP-FGM says.

   While FGM is banned in the EU, Britain and the United States, it still
   occurs in these areas. The private nature of the practice and the
   silencing of victims or their hesitation to come forward continue to
   make FGM challenging to track.

   "Because it's being brought to other places, the thought of it as
   something that happens in a faraway country doesn't matter, because if
   you know someone who can do it, they'll do it," Igusti said. "There
   isn't protection here. There are legal protections, but it doesn't
   really matter."

   Some parents travel back to their home countries to administer FGM to
   their children. Igusti underwent FGM while in Indonesia visiting
   family.

   "When it happened, it was kind of out of nowhere," Igusti said. "My
   aunt said that we were going to the supermarket, but it was a
   completely different route. It happened in a way that was painful. I
   couldn't walk for a couple of days, and I had gauze stuck in me.
   Some parents travel back to their home countries to administer FGM to
   their children. Dena Igusti underwent FGM while in Indonesia visiting
   family. "It was kind of out of nowhere," she said.

   "There's the physical pain of it, but there's also the threats of what
   can happen afterwards. For me, it was always the threat of getting cut
   again."

   Anecdotal evidence shows that when families migrate outside practicing
   communities, the pressure to conform still compels them to cut their
   daughters in secret or take them back home, Maksud said.

   "Discriminatory gender norms, poverty, low levels of education, lack of
   access to services, poor governance and humanitarian crises may all
   still lead to girls being cut, even following migration," she said.

   Intervention by international organizations to end FGM has been
   disrupted by COVID-19 lockdowns and travel restrictions, the [3]U.N.
   Children's Fund reported in February. Over the next decade, 2 million
   additional women and girls may undergo this procedure as a result of
   halted outreach and school closures, the report said.

   "Before the pandemic, there were educational programs," said Ann-Marie
   Wilson, founder and executive director of 28 Too Many, an anti-FGM
   advocacy group. "Either the funding has stopped for some of the
   programs, the people delivering the programs have gone away, or the
   girls aren't able to access it anymore because of school closures."

   Without checks on girls in schools, many have been sent out to work,
   married off by their parents or sent to work in the sex industry, said
   Wilson.

   Wilson said her organization and others like it have had difficulty
   continuing their FGM intervention programs during the pandemic because
   of a lack of funding. The group received most of its funds through
   in-person events. In the first quarter of 2021, 28 Too Many's income
   was down by a quarter, according to Wilson.

   "We'd like to make sure that we do make it through this pandemic and
   carry on to the future, expanding our work and seeing it into the
   future," Wilson said. "We want to work until there is nobody left who
   has FGM and is vulnerable."

   UNICEF adapted its FGM intervention programs to accommodate social
   distancing during the pandemic by switching to digital media platforms,
   conducting door-to-door campaigns and conducting community dialogues,
   according to Maksud.

   In 2019, the U.N. called for action to eliminate FGM globally by 2030.
   But with intervention tactics halted by the COVID-19 pandemic, this
   goal may be out of reach.

   "Even before COVID-19 upended progress, the Sustainable Development
   Goals' target of ending female genital mutilation by 2030 was an
   ambitious commitment," said the report, written by UNICEF Executive
   Director Henrietta Fore and Natalia Kanem, executive director of the
   U.N. Population Fund (UNFPA). "Far from dampening our ambition,
   however, the pandemic has sharpened our resolve to protect the 4
   million girls and women who are at risk of female genital mutilation
   each year."

References

   1. https://copfgm.org/2020/07/legal-situations-facilitating-cross-border-fgm
   2. https://med.virginia.edu/family-medicine/wp-content/uploads/sites/285/2017/01/Llamas-Paper.pdf
   3. https://www.unicef.org/press-releases/2-million-additional-cases-female-genital-mutilation-likely-occur-over-next-decade