SIR: In commemoration of the International Day of Zero Tolerance for Female Genital Mutilation, I was part of an advocacy project that sought to raise awareness in rural communities, where the practice prevails, about its dangers and how it violates their bodies.
FGM can be as violating as narrowing the vaginal wall and sewing it close to serve as a covering seal, to introducing corrosives into the outer reproductive organ. While at least, 200million girls and women alive today and living in 30 countries have undergone this life-scarring practice, what is more chilling is the fact that the exact figure of violated girls is unknown.
Pleasantly, the situation is not hopeless as it might sound to some. While there has been a general decline in the prevalence of the practice over the last three decades, not all countries have made progress and the pace of decline has been uneven.
Could this be a result of poorly targeted advocacy and awareness creation programs?
The answer is yes. From years of educating women and young girls about their sexual and reproductive health rights, I’ve noticed one common factor; female genital mutilation is a part of what unites these women as a community – culture. Like inhabitants of a besieged territory, poorly informed women have helplessly surrendered to the hands of their captor – cultural norms.
In hopes of changing this narrative, advocacy campaigns have been targeted at policy makers to institute FGM as a punishable offence under the law. And this has worked, at least to an extent. For example, FGM is a crime in all EU member states and now in over 30 African countries such as Nigeria, Ghana, Burkina Faso, Uganda, etc. Oddly, some of these countries still record a high prevalence of FGM.
While efforts at protecting vulnerable girls and women by the law have proved helpful, they are sadly not enough. Awareness campaigns have to be specially created and targeted at gently but effectively reshaping cultural norms and values. Whilst it is true culture forms the basic roots of our identity, it must be established that for evolution to occur, culture, like all forms of life, is subject to change.
Another major factor I have noticed responsible for a misguided view on FGM in the society is the trust in low quality health care systems. For a health system to be functional, it has to be capable of passing trusted and non-compromising information to the public. However, majority of the healthcare systems led by traditional agents and some trained medical professionals have guided many of these vulnerable women into thinking ‘’FGM is safer when carried out by a health professional’’.
Targeting and mobilising health professionals to actively engage in the campaign of eliminating female genital cutting will go a long way in creating a cataclysmic change in rural communities across the world.
By redirecting solutions to the ignored problems and testing new methods, we can slowly begin to see a change and hope that more unprotected girls are not subjected to a life of pain and violation.
- Claire Mom,
clairemom26@gmail.com
