Kenyan Doctor Seeks to Legalize Female Genital Circumcision

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Moses Ebe Ochonu

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29.10.2019, 20:10:4029.10.19
an USAAfricaDialogue

A Kenyan doctor is seeking to legalize female genital mutilation

By Bukola Adebayo, CNN

Updated 1954 GMT (0354 HKT) October 25, 2019 

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Chimney rescue. A hydraulic platform is raised at Dixon's Chimney in Carlisle, Cumbria, where a man, whose condition is currently unknown, continues to hang upside down from the top of the chimney 270ft up. Picture date: Monday October 28, 2019. Local reports said shouts and wailing could be heard coming from the chimney in the early hours of this morning before police arrived on the scene. See PA story POLICE Chimney. Photo credit should read: Danny Lawson/PA Wire URN:47938205 (Press Association via AP Images)

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Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri speaks during an address to the nation in Beirut, Lebanon, Tuesday, Oct. 29, 2019. Lebanon's embattled prime minister says he is presenting his resignation to the president after he hit a "dead end" amid nationwide anti-government protests. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar)

kenya fighting fgm elbagir pkg_00022429.jpg

Chimney rescue. A hydraulic platform is raised at Dixon's Chimney in Carlisle, Cumbria, where a man, whose condition is currently unknown, continues to hang upside down from the top of the chimney 270ft up. Picture date: Monday October 28, 2019. Local reports said shouts and wailing could be heard coming from the chimney in the early hours of this morning before police arrived on the scene. See PA story POLICE Chimney. Photo credit should read: Danny Lawson/PA Wire URN:47938205 (Press Association via AP Images)

Shrine to Le Van Ha

Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri speaks during an address to the nation in Beirut, Lebanon, Tuesday, Oct. 29, 2019. Lebanon's embattled prime minister says he is presenting his resignation to the president after he hit a "dead end" amid nationwide anti-government protests. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar)

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(CNN)A female doctor in Kenya wants female genital mutilation to be decriminalized.

Tatu Kamau is asking Kenya's courts to allow women above the age of 18 to be able to practice female genital mutilation (FGM), saying they have a right to choose what they do to their bodies at that age.
She wants the Kenyan government to annul the Prohibition of Female Genital Mutilation Act 2011 and the board set up to enforce the law disbanded.
    FGM is widely condemned in the country and across parts of Africa but Kamau argues in a 2017 petition filed against the government, that it is an age-old Kenyan tradition and that an outright ban infringes on a woman's right to exercise her cultural beliefs.
    Kamau is representing herself in the case before the Nairobi High Court. She told judges on Thursday that the term mutilation is "offensive" and denigrates the cultural significance of the practice.
    "Women who took their daughters for circumcision were not taking them there to destroy them. Those children were not thrown away afterward, they were celebrated as respected members of the society. To use the word in our context suggests that it is malicious and that we are intentionally damaging our females. To me, it is very wrong," Kamau said.
    She is pushing for medical workers and "certified" traditional cutters to be allowed to circumcise women.
    "We could have had limitations of where you can do it, when, who can do it for you and how ...Those things could have been controlled ... such that you have certain months of the year and that is the only time you can do and it can only be done by certain professionals, those are the only people who are allowed to do it," Kamau said.
    Kamau declined to comment to CNN until the case is over.

    Violation of women and girl's rights

    FGM is illegal for both women and girls in Kenya, and individuals involved in the practice could spend three years in jail even if it's done outside its border.
    Despite the law, many women are undergoing the cut in rural Kenya where cultural and traditional beliefs persist that FGM — the partial removal of the external female genitalia such as the clitoris or labia — reduces a woman's desire for sex.
    According to the UN estimates, 21 percent of Kenyan women between the age of 15 and 49 have been cut, and at least 200 million girls and women across 30 countries are affected by the practice.
    FGM, internationally recognized as a violation of the human rights of women and girls, can cause severe bleeding and other health issues, infections, infertility and complications in childbirth, according to the World Health Organization.
    Anti-FGM campaigners have described Kamau's position as "outrageous" saying arguments to overturn the act erodes progress that has been made in the fight for women and girl's rights in Kenya.
    "It's outrageous that a supposed doctor, who should be protecting Kenyan women and girls, is trying to put them in harm's way. Her comments suggest that she doesn't seem to understand basic medicine," said Brendan Wynne from the Five Foundation, a global partnership to end FGM.
      "FGM causes lifelong damage and can kill. Let's not roll back progress at a point when Kenya is finally starting to see some traction on this issue."
      Kamau's petition has been adjourned until December.

      Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju

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      29.10.2019, 21:37:0229.10.19
      an usaafricadialogue
      God have mercy

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      OLAYINKA AGBETUYI

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      30.10.2019, 16:57:4530.10.19
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      Let me say again that there is a group of female diasporans who on account of their chosen religious affiliation CELEBRATE what some overzealous westernized Africans term female genital mutilation.

      OAA



      Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.

      Patrick Effiboley

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      01.11.2019, 22:13:1401.11.19
      an USAAfricaDialogue
      This Kenyan doctor is right in having such a project since some other people are legalizing same sex marriage.

      Dr Emery Patrick EFFIBOLEY
      Assistant Professor, 
      Department of History and Archaeology, University of Abomey-Calavi 
      Andrew W. Mellon Postdoctoral Research Fellow, University of the Witwatersrand,Johannesburg,(2014-2016) 
       


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      Oluwatoyin Vincent Adepoju

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      02.11.2019, 04:45:3402.11.19
      an usaafricadialogue
      Female Genital Mutilation is harmful to many on whom it is practiced.

      Same sex  marriage is very different in its nature and effects.



      Okechukwu Ukaga

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      02.11.2019, 09:21:2502.11.19
      an usaafric...@googlegroups.com
      What about male genital mutilation? Should circumcision (aka "genital mutilation") be seen as wrong in both male and female and in all cases? 
      Or should the emphasis be on preventing ham to those on which it is practiced, in which case the focus should be on standards and best practices as in other aspects of medicine and not on outright ban?  



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      Executive Director and Extension Professor
      University of Minnesota Extension Southeast Regional Sustainable Development Partnership
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      Book Review Editor, Environment, Development and Sustainability (www.springer.com/10668),

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