|

Female
genital mutilation lives on in Djibouti
DJIBOUTI
- Late one evening on a stony hill above Djibouti’s northern
town of Tadjourah, an old Afar woman is squatting comfortably on
a thin mat, tiny limbs wrapped tidily up around her.
A
reputed practitioner of female circumcision, the woman answers
questions in a croaking voice about a custom reviled by human
rights campaigners as an atrocity against womankind.
Perhaps
understandably, she declines to give permission for her name to
be published. At one point the old woman falls silent. Then, in
a tone suddenly laden with suspicion, she asks her foreign
visitor: “Do you want to ban circumcision?”
Despite
attempts to stop it, circumcision or female genital mutilation (FGM),
remains the norm in Djibouti, a tiny country in northeast
Africa, as it does in many communities across the east and west
of the continent.
In
Djibouti the practice is illegal, but its proponents continue
the “cut” and arguments against it have failed to wipe it
out.
FGM
takes different forms but the most severe, infibulation,
prevalent in Djibouti, involves cutting away the inner labia and
clitoris then tying the remaining lips together, leaving a tiny
hole for urine and menstrual blood.
Abdu
Mohmed, a native of Tadjourah now living in the capital Djibouti
town, still remembers his sister’s screams, and her subsequent
dread of blood and knives.
“How
many women have been destroyed (by FGM)?” he asks.
A
2002 survey of 1,000 women giving birth at Djibouti’s Peltier
Hospital concluded that 98 percent of women had been
circumcised, of whom the vast majority had been infibulated.
Nomad
tradition
In
rural areas an even higher rate of infibulation is likely, says
Miriam Martinelli, an Italian nurse and research student with
more than 10 years of regional experience.
Nobody
can say for sure whether the rates have reduced in recent years,
because the women giving birth were circumcised several years
ago.
Tradition,
remains strong in Tadjourah, where nomads lead camels with their
loads of arid firewood along dusty seaside streets, and small
classes of children learn Quranic texts in narrow backstreets,
sitting on large, upturned tins of powdered milk, boys on one
side, girls on the other.
But
the taboo is slowly being broken.
“At
least, now, we can talk about it. It was not like this 10 years
ago, and it is not like this in Somalia, for example. So this is
a change,” said Martinelli.
“The
second thing is quite a lot of people among well-educated people
and quite high-level people say: ’I don’t want to mutilate
my daughters, but....’ meaning ’there is such a strong
pressure on me, my women, and my family that most probably I
will again’. Maybe the next generation will say: ’I don’t
want to, and I won’t.’”
Attempts
to force a solution take time to have an effect.
Illiteracy
in Djibouti is high, and loyalty to the group generally exceeds
trust of meddlesome outsiders.
Article
333 of Djibouti’s Penal Code, for example, outlaws the
practice but few people have ever been arrested.
And
in August, a German aid group supported a workshop in Tadjourah
to disprove FGM’s alleged links with Islam.
But
less than two months later in Tadjourah - confusion exists: does
Islam forbid, tolerate, recommend or even oblige the different
forms of circumcision?
“As
a Muslim, I prefer it when there is circumcision,” says Ahmed
Houmed, seen locally as a religious authority. Medical arguments
fare little better.
Medical
dangers
According
to the UN, the medical result of FGM can include pain, trauma,
haemorrhage, infection, fracture or dislocation of the hip joint
while the struggling girl is held, difficulties with urination
and menstruation, infertility and abscesses.
And
UN experts now worry that since FGM causes blood to be present
in almost every sexual encounter, the speed of HIV transmission
could dramatically increase.
According
to a 2002 study, Djibouti’s estimated HIV prevalence is still
low, by African standards, at 2.9 percent.
But
together with high fertility, malnutrition, and poor emergency
care, FGM is a contributor to Djibouti’s high levels of
maternal mortality, since haemorrhaging at birth is frequent.
Mohmed,
32, unemployed and father of 10, does not see the link. Many
circumcised women give birth without dying, he says, adding:
“Death is decided by God.”
And
when he travelled to nearby Ethiopia, he noticed that sexual
relations were more free, something he wants to protect his
daughter against.
Circumcision
significantly reduces female sexual pleasure, and, with almost
total closure of the vagina, sex becomes more difficult.
Defibulation, or opening of the vagina, is done as a medical
procedure, intercourse, or, some say, with a knife.
Non-circumcision
may seriously reduce the chances of marriage. Family and social
pressures to circumcise are enormous.
“The
(typical) grandmother says: `if she is not excised
(circumcised), she will become a prostitute. She cannot stay in
the house,” explains Aicha Youssouf, a midwife in Tadjourah.
“If
she is not (circumcised), she (the Djibouti woman) has a
complex, because she believes herself to be different from
others...She will think that the man will reject her.”
“Everybody
will tell you it is not good,” said Abdu Mohmed, a native of
Tadjourah now living in Djibouti town and frustrated by the slow
pace of change, “but nobody is changing the rules.”
-
Reuters
Etc
jpg
courtesy: menzies.us
Should
female genital mutilation continue? Click here
to have your say.
|