More than 1,500 women victims of genital mutiliation in shock statistics compiled by ONE hospital… and most are from Somalia

  • The barbaric practice is most common in Muslim areas of Africa
  • However at least 11 of the victims were born in Britain
  • The practice is illegal in the UK but there have been no prosecutions

By Chris Pleasance

 

 

More than 1,500 new cases of female genital mutilation have been revealed by a single London maternity unit and staff admit that other cases could have ‘slipped through the net.’

St George’s hospital in Tooting has treated nearly  200 women a year since it started keeping records on the violent practice.

While most of the 1,546 victims treated in the hospital’s specialist unit were born in Somalia, disturbing statistics show that at least 11 were born in the UK, where genital mutilation has been a crime since 1985.

crude tools used for the trade

 

Rudimentary tools are often used to perform the operations, like these found in Kenya (pictured left). The procedure is often performed on young girls like nine-year-old Fay Mohammed (pictured right).

Others were from Nigeria or Eritrea where the practice is common among some Muslim communities.

Campaigners described the statistics as ‘horrifying’ while staff at the hospital said it shows the tribal practice remains relatively common.

Karen Lewis, a midwife at St George’s, warned that some staff  were fearful of getting involved because they saw the backstreet operations as a cultural issue, rather than abuse.

She said: ‘The women we see have often faced years of pain and suffer flashbacks and other psychological problems. Some of them are also terrified of childbirth because of what’s happened to them in the past.’

 

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‘Some of them also don’t realise that FGM is wrong and are quite horrified when we tell them.

‘So we need to do much more to raise awareness and have a big educational campaign to stop it happening to more girls in the future.’

St George hospital

 

One nurse at St George’s hospital said that some staff view FGM as a cultural issue rather than abuse

Battersea MP Jane Ellison, who chairs the all-party parliamentary group on female genital mutilation, said: ‘Many of these women are suffering the chronic health problems associated with FGM.

‘Yet again we are shown that there is a big problem to which our health and other public services must respond.’

Despite the high number of cases – 80 so far this year – nobody has yet been prosecuted for the practice.

The Crown Prosecution Service says it is studying five case files passed on by the Metropolitan Police.

Keir Starmer, the Director of Public Prosecutions, has said it is only a matter of time before somebody is prosecuted but efforts are being hampered by victim’s unwillingness to come forward.

 

FGM – PAINFUL, BARBARIC AND SOMETIMES DEADLY

Female genital mutilation, or FGM, is a common practice among some Muslim communities across the middle of Africa, including Somalia, Eritrea, North Sudan and central Mali.

It is also present in Muslim communities in Indonesia, Oman, Yemen and the United Arab Emirates, among others.

The operation involves cutting or removing female sexual tissue. It can also involve stitching using silk thread or catgut.

The process is supposed to cleanse the woman of sexual impurity and victims can spend up to 40 days bound from the waist down while healing.

The operation is usually performed on children or young girls before entering adolescence, though ages vary from community to community.

Given that most surgeries are performed by untrained women, commonly Aunts of the girls or village matrons, risks include infection, pain, sterility, and death due to blood loss.

Due to the nature of the wounds, problems can occur later during childbirth.

While the practice has been illegal in the UK since 1985, there have so far been no prosecutions due in part to victim’s reluctance to come forward, and also because some women do not recognise it as a crime.

The practice is also specifically outlawed in Belgium, Sweden and some US states.

In Africa several nations, including Somalia, have made declarations against the practice though across the continent legislation is patchy and difficult to enforce.

 

 

1 COMMENT

      • This article is from the Daily Mail, a newspaper with enough hate for Muslims I would not even touch it with a parch-pole.

        This issue does exist and we care, but such people hijacking the issue from us should not be supported at all.

        You only have to read the comments left by their readers, because the papers owners were vile supporters of UK Nazism. Any negative issue they could find from Muslim communities, they will be the first to jump and use it to humiliate our children and their families.

        • Absolutely Mohamd, this article was specifically talking about muslims practising this awful habit, as if non-muslims do not do it in east africa. The writer went all the way to the emirates and forgot ethiopia somehow.

          • so what, how about condeming this horrific act before condeming the westerners for reporting. You and your 12 century views on women belong under the drone's hellfire missile.

            Somalis for Atheism

  1. KULUC does that happen to your mother and sisters that you and your perverted father touch their private parts.

  2. This should stop period! Women should be able to enjoy sex just as men do, it takes a perverted and mentally unstable man to not want their women to enjoy something as intimate and personal a human interaction. Only weak men and brainwashed women support this kind of stuff.

  3. Horrible young girls having female organs removed. FGM which is done by Muslin countries put them in prison and remove their organs.