Hargeisa- It is a ritual supposed to keep women “pure,” but an increased understanding of the severe health risks of extreme forms of female genital mutilation appears to be slowly rolling back its prevalence in Somalia’s northwest.

In the self-declared Somali republic of Somaliland, most women over 25 have undergone the most extreme form of FGM, known as “pharaonic.” This entails removal of the clitoris and the labia minora, cutting out flesh from the vulva and sewing up the outer labia, leaving only a tiny orifice for the passage of urine and menstrual flow.

The procedure is normally done with a razor blade when the girl is between 5 and 11 years old, and without any pain killers. They remain sewn up until marriage, at which point they are either opened up during sex — causing pain and distress to both partners — or cut open with scissors.

“I cut girls for 15 years. My grandmother and mother taught me how and it was a source of income for me — but I stopped doing any cutting four years ago,” recounted Amran Mahmood.

“I decided to stop because of the problems. The worst time was when I was cutting a girl and she started bleeding. I injected the muscle to stop the bleeding and I cleaned the area and she kept on bleeding.”

As well as social status, being a so-called “cutter” brought in good money. Cutting one girl takes 30 minutes and brings in between US$30 and US$50, a large sum of money for Somaliland.

Amran’s own daughter was cut, but she swears her granddaughters will not undergo the full procedure.

After attending awareness programs organized by Tostan, an anti-FGM NGO financed by the U.N. children’s agency UNICEF, Amran has become an anti-cutting advocate.

‘Things are changing’

The medical consequences of the stitching — urine retention, blocking of menstrual flow, pain, bleeding, infection and childbirth complications — have brought the practice into disrepute.

In the urban setting of Hargeysa at least, the generation who are adolescents today have largely abandoned it in favor of less extreme forms, which still involve the removal of the clitoris.

Their mothers, mindful of the pain they themselves have endured, support the change.

“Things are changing. There are now men willing to marry uncut girls,” said village headman Mohamed Said Mohamed, a Muslim like most in Somalia, sporting a graying beard and a traditional sarong.

“I am totally against cutting. It is not accepted by our religion.”

FGM is concentrated in some 29 countries in Africa and the Middle East, according to the World Health Organization which says cutting has no health benefits and brands the practice a violation of human rights. It says more than 125 million girls and women today have undergone the procedure, whose roots are a mix of cultural, social and supposedly religious factors.

The UN General Assembly adopted a resolution to eliminate FGM in December 2012.

At Sheikh Nuur primary school the girls sit on one side of the classroom in long beige skirts topped off by a black hijab, the boys on the other in beige trousers and white shirts.

“People are beginning to see how dangerous the extreme form is,” said 14-year-old Sagal Abdulrahman, a slim, articulate and slightly solemn girl.

“The first type involved stitches, and is the painful one, because there are many times when the woman gives birth and has pain. And ? when she has her period, it causes pain. The second type is not that painful,” said her classmate Asma Ibrahim Jibril.

“I’m very happy because my parents chose the less severe one, and I was very OK with that. And I won?t face the painful things that would come in the future,” she said.

– Islamic jurisprudence –

For Charity Koronya, a UNICEF protection officer, all forms of FGM must be stopped.

“To me total abandonment is the key because even if it is just a small cut it is still a violation,” she said, explaining that she herself comes from a Kenyan tribe that practices the clitoridectomy form of FGM.

She escaped the practice because her father, who travelled outside their home district for his work, refused it.

The issue of whether of whether Islamic law requires FGM is the subject of much discussion, with several clerics admitting they themselves are confused.

1 COMMENT

  1. These Reuters bast*rds are calling Somaliland "Northwest of Somalia….." Are they this ignorant or what? Somalia is Somalia and Somaliland is (and has been) Somaliland — Somaliland has never become a part of Somalia. Reuters bast*ards need to check their history…….

  2. I find how that photo is orchestrated very disturbing and highlights the problem with this campaign. These child are holding up paper with English written on it. So clearly the audience aren't Somalis but outsiders, I find this patronising.

    This message should be in Somali targeting and educating Somali people on why FGM is wrong. FGM is actually pretty easy to eradicate in Somaliland, it just needs educating the masses. There is no religious or cultural justification for it,

  3. Smdh at people being mad at the signs being written in english. Lets celebrate the fact that this horrible crime is being pushed out.