The 12-year-old Egyptian girl named Badour Shaker was taken to a physician at an illegal clinic last month to be circumcised. Her mother reportedly paid the female doctor $9 to cut off her daughters' clitoris, something commonly done in their culture. The mother Zeniab Abdel Ghani told a local newspaper that the physician offered her $3,000 after her daughter died to keep her from going further with a lawsuit.
The cause of death has been determined to be anesthesia related as the girl was found to have overdosed during the procedure. In the past, infections, bleeding, complications during child birth and more deadly reactions have occurred as the result of female circumcision.
Thursday, the Egyptian Ministry for Health released a statement saying it is "prohibited for any doctors, nurses, or any other person to carry out any cut of, flattening or modification of any natural part of the female reproductive system, either in government hospitals, non-government hospitals or any other places."
So far the ban is not a law making female circumcision illegal. For that to occur it would have to be brought up to legislation and passed nationally. The punishment for performing female circumcision was not clearly expressed but the ban was said to be enforced.
According to a survey done by UNICEF in 2003 97% of married females were circumcised in Egypt. And at least 50% of girls ages 10-18 have undergone the mutilating procedure. Those who practice this painful and life changing removal of body parts, do so because they believe it makes calms the females sexual desire and will keep her loyal to her husband or future husband. Often the clitoris is removed as well as other surrounding areas of the female reproductive organs.
After the 1950's female circumcision was no longer allowed to be done by hospital workers or those in the medical community. It was often performed by barbers and others outside of a health care setting. In 1995, a CNN documentary about the dangers of the barbaric and unsanitary female mutilation led the ban on anyone outside of a hospital performing the procedure.
Now Egypt has banned the dangerous and life changing practice and hopefully as a result females living there who haven't already been mutilated can keep all of their body. But the truth is there will still likely be illegal female circumcisions done in a culture who believes this to be beneficial.
Sources:
"Egypt Bans Female Circumcision" AP.
http://www.newsday.com/news/nationworld/wire/sns-ap-egypt-female-circumcision,0,3948841.story?coll=sns-ap-nationworld-headlines
Published by Katherine M.
mama, wife, student View profile
- Females on Death RowApproximately fifty females are awaiting execution on death row. Many of them were born in Texas where they now sit incarcerated on death row.
- Global Slavery and Women: Why Women Should Worry - Part IIUnderstanding and searching for solutions to the global slave trade of women.
- Female Circumcision: For the Greater Good?A look into female circumcision and it's pros and cons.
- Rites of Passage: Male Circumcision Versus Female CircumcisionA look into the difference between male and female circumcision (or female genital mutilation).
- Female Genital Mutilation: An Islamic Practice?This research paper discusses female genital mutilation in terms of how it relates to the religion of Islam, where it all began, and whether it is sanctioned or condmened by the Qu'ran.
- Female Circumcision Banned in Egypt
- Will We Ever See the End of Female Genital Mutilation?
- Female Genital Mutilation
- Female Genital Mutilation
- Female Chastity Versus Female Circumcision and Mutilation
- Female Genital Mutilation: The Demand for Strict Criminalization
- New African Film Confronts Forced Female Circumcision
