Hundreds of Tanzanian schoolchildren returned home on Monday after spending three(3) months hiding in safe houses to escape genital mutilation. Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) can range from hacking off the clitoris to the removal of the entire female genitalia.
Many school
girls fled to shelters run by charities and church organisations, which offer
protection during the months FGM is traditionally carried out, from October to
December. Some of the shelters were guarded by the police to ensure the safety
of the girls.
Minister of Labour and Employment Gaudensia Kabaka called on
traditional leaders to use their influence to stop "this retrograde
practice."
Campaigners call the dangerous practice mutilation rather than the
term female circumcision, so as to make clear the dangers it involves and the
harm it causes.
Apart from the intense pain itself, immediate dangers include
bleeding and infection. In the longer term, risks include infertility and
complications during childbirth, sometimes resulting in the death of the baby.
One of the girls said:
"My mother supported me, she did not want me to be cut, but
my father began to beat me so I decided to come here," said one girl in
tears, who had been sheltered in a centre run by the protestant church.
FGM was outlawed in Tanzania in 1998 and carries a punishment of
up to 15 years in prison, but is still regularly carried out, especially in
northern and central regions of the east African nation.
It continues to be carried out in secret, often in basic
conditions without anaesthetic.
In November, the UN Chief Ban Ki-Moon launched a global campaign
to end FGM within a generation.
Over 125 million women have been mutilated in 29 countries in
Africa and the Middle East, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO),
which condemns the practice as a "violation of the human rights" of
women.
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