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New wave of female genital mutilation in Uganda targets married women

A study by the Reproductive, Educative and Community Health Programme (REACH) has shown that traditionalists in Uganda have now shifted to circumcising married women with the consent of their families, causing the prevalence of FGM to rise drastically in older women.

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The NGO REACH interviewed more than 200 youths in the Sebei sub-region of eastern Uganda. The results revealed that while only 24% of girls aged 10 to 14 have experienced some form of genital mutilation, 76% of women between 25 and 35 have undergone the procedure in the region.

REACH executive director Beatrice Chelangat told the Daily Monitor newspaper that this new tactic of imposing the practice on married women is done with the help of their families. Members of the community say an uncircumcised woman is unfit to be married, undeserving of respect and should be shunned.

“This is done in the full knowledge of their husbands… It is done at home and in the bushes, hills, caves, in unhygienic places, creating a great risk of infection,” said Chelangat.

The report goes on to elaborate that uncircumcised married women face undue pressure from their husbands and the community as they are not allowed to serve elders, get food from the granary, or attend traditional meetings.

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“Their mothers-in-law abuse them; they are shunned,” Chelangat added.

Read: Together, We Can Stop FGM

In recent years, female genital mutilation (FGM) has also been “medicalised” – it is performed by medical personnel to minimise the immediate health impacts and giving those who uphold the practice the validation of “safety”.

Speaking at a workshop organised by Uganda Women Parliamentary Association (UWOPA) in Kampala, former MP Jacob Wangolo urged MPs to address the issue, saying, “The archaic practice has now taken a new twist. Women are cut by ‘traditional birth attendants’ after giving birth, subjecting them to double jeopardy.”

He added, “Many girls practice FGM in hidden or remote places, while others cross the border via Amudat and get cut in Kenya, making it difficult to track them.”

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A new wave

The practice continues even despite a law passed in 2010 that prohibits FGM, describing it as “crude, outdated and an infringement on the rights of the girl child”.

A law passed in 2010 prohibits FGM, describing it as “crude, outdated and an infringement on the rights of the girl child”

Locals say the law had a real impact, although Jane Cherotich, a traditional healer who is based in the village of Kapchorwa in eastern Uganda and has been performing FGM for 15 years, told the Global Post newspaper that this has merely necessitated a change in those targeted.

“We are not cutting young girls anymore because they are at risk of experiencing heavy bleeding that may result in death… When a girl gets injured or dies during the procedure, then the authorities arrest everyone, including their parents. We are now focusing on married women because whatever happens to them, they take responsibility. Besides, no one knows about it.”

“The practice cannot end soon because it’s our culture, and we love it,” Cherotich continued. “We are going to circumcise only those who are willing to take part in the procedure. We are targeting mature, married women who understand the culture of our community and the importance of circumcision.”

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Read: FGM in 2018: Should women be allowed to voluntarily practice it and ‘uphold tradition’?

Because of the stigma and maltreatment that uncircumcised women endure, there are many who are willing to undergo the procedure. Another interviewee and mother of two, identified only as Chemutai, told the Global Post, “I’m very happy because I’m now a full and respected woman in this community… I can speak in a meeting, and people listen to me. I now enjoy the privileges of being a [proper] woman of this community.”

“We have to undergo the cut to become full women,” Chemutai said. “You can’t serve food [to elders] or talk to elders in a meeting when you are not circumcised. They will abuse you and curse you.”

She said there was a way around it: “The elders are now allowing young girls to first get married before they undergo the procedure because of the government’s strict rules… It’s mandatory to be circumcised after marriage to be accepted by the community.”

The Ugandan government is adamant that these new tactics will not be tolerated. Kato Cherop, a local government official in Kapchorwa, said in a statement, “It’s against the law to carry out female genital mutilation on any person. A person who carries out female genital mutilation or does it on herself commits an offence and can [get] imprisonment for up to 10 years.”

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