Dubai Telegraph - Kenyan girls still afflicted by genital mutilation years after ban

EUR -
AED 4.181853
AFN 71.737344
ALL 94.207554
AMD 418.322713
ANG 2.038723
AOA 1044.183684
ARS 1684.219261
AUD 1.652043
AWG 2.051075
AZN 1.935121
BAM 1.954504
BBD 2.295478
BDT 140.187076
BGN 1.925397
BHD 0.429715
BIF 3384.956268
BMD 1.138695
BND 1.474722
BOB 7.87578
BRL 5.889215
BSD 1.139745
BTN 106.97609
BWP 15.488733
BYN 3.305509
BYR 22318.42614
BZD 2.292181
CAD 1.615985
CDF 2581.998711
CHF 0.922298
CLF 0.02669
CLP 1050.435044
CNY 7.741021
CNH 7.746498
COP 3916.712983
CRC 517.457002
CUC 1.138695
CUP 30.175423
CVE 110.191959
CZK 24.252899
DJF 202.95547
DKK 7.474822
DOP 66.965612
DZD 151.930292
EGP 56.43875
ERN 17.080428
ETB 183.746703
FJD 2.580392
FKP 0.862766
GBP 0.862704
GEL 3.011847
GGP 0.862766
GHS 12.850482
GIP 0.862766
GMD 83.124857
GNF 9986.380487
GTQ 8.695236
GYD 238.521895
HKD 8.929682
HNL 30.494786
HRK 7.533497
HTG 148.96126
HUF 354.082932
IDR 20310.906483
ILS 3.41842
IMP 0.862766
INR 107.447907
IQD 1493.010352
IRR 1565990.589223
ISK 143.999498
JEP 0.862766
JMD 179.501017
JOD 0.807318
JPY 184.189074
KES 147.427206
KGS 99.579138
KHR 4574.967464
KMF 494.193463
KPW 1024.826089
KRW 1749.752789
KWD 0.352551
KYD 0.94977
KZT 552.993446
LAK 25016.417765
LBP 102061.847887
LKR 383.106057
LRD 207.60239
LSL 18.734582
LTL 3.362271
LVL 0.688786
LYD 7.31615
MAD 10.687216
MDL 20.207605
MGA 4820.80451
MKD 61.594172
MMK 2390.41825
MNT 4076.111956
MOP 9.206597
MRU 45.48585
MUR 54.338532
MVR 17.593515
MWK 1976.290008
MXN 19.940761
MYR 4.655003
MZN 72.758607
NAD 18.734582
NGN 1569.96453
NIO 41.942198
NOK 11.324352
NPR 171.161545
NZD 2.018867
OMR 0.437826
PAB 1.139745
PEN 3.886424
PGK 5.001685
PHP 69.797448
PKR 317.183953
PLN 4.287814
PYG 6956.388929
QAR 4.154446
RON 5.241443
RSD 117.302246
RUB 89.917486
RWF 1669.093634
SAR 4.280063
SBD 9.16872
SCR 16.007589
SDG 683.217725
SEK 11.087566
SGD 1.474047
SHP 0.850151
SLE 28.229626
SLL 23877.873405
SOS 651.368238
SRD 42.681693
STD 23568.691856
STN 24.483771
SVC 9.97239
SYP 125.86237
SZL 18.723589
THB 38.053992
TJS 10.548108
TMT 3.985433
TND 3.378061
TOP 2.741705
TRY 53.089497
TTD 7.745866
TWD 36.281069
TZS 2994.762678
UAH 51.15779
UGX 4183.227131
USD 1.138695
UYU 45.749675
UZS 13689.925577
VES 706.848451
VND 29947.684055
VUV 135.743206
WST 3.166577
XAF 655.522484
XAG 0.019442
XAU 0.000281
XCD 3.07738
XCG 2.054038
XDR 0.81526
XOF 655.522484
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.721169
ZAR 18.754541
ZMK 10249.624729
ZMW 20.530391
ZWL 366.659393
  • CMSC

    -0.1160

    21.93

    -0.53%

  • BCC

    1.2600

    81.02

    +1.56%

  • NGG

    -0.4100

    83.01

    -0.49%

  • GSK

    0.6100

    52.5

    +1.16%

  • AZN

    2.7300

    188.41

    +1.45%

  • CMSD

    -0.1600

    21.77

    -0.73%

  • BCE

    -0.2800

    22.92

    -1.22%

  • RBGPF

    3.7000

    65

    +5.69%

  • RIO

    -1.3700

    93.74

    -1.46%

  • BTI

    0.2800

    62.76

    +0.45%

  • JRI

    0.2100

    12.79

    +1.64%

  • RYCEF

    0.3900

    18.39

    +2.12%

  • VOD

    0.0300

    13.89

    +0.22%

  • RELX

    0.4200

    31.34

    +1.34%

  • BP

    -0.5900

    37.13

    -1.59%

Kenyan girls still afflicted by genital mutilation years after ban
Kenyan girls still afflicted by genital mutilation years after ban / Photo: Tony KARUMBA - AFP

Kenyan girls still afflicted by genital mutilation years after ban

Maasai women erupted with mocking heckles as a community elder, wrapped in a traditional red blanket, claimed that female genital mutilation had all but stopped in their community in southern Kenya.

Text size:

The women know that mutilating young girls by removing their clitoris and inner labia -- framed as a rite of passage -- is still an entrenched practice in some remote villages of Narok county, around three hours from the nearest tarmac road.

One local nurse told AFP some 80 percent of girls in the area are still affected, despite the practice being made illegal in 2011.

"Why are you telling people that you have stopped, when we have teenage girls coming to the hospital who have been cut?" asked a woman in the crowd, gathered in Entasekera village to discuss the issue.

The women nodded emphatically, while the men sat stone-faced.

Female genital mutilation (FGM) has survived decades of pressure to end it, from British colonialists and later Kenyan and global NGOs.

It still exists not only among the rural southern Maasai, but also in Kenya's northeast -- with parts of the Somali diaspora community in the region reporting rates over 90 percent -- as well as in some urban areas and among educated groups, where campaigners have highlighted the rise of so-called medicalised FGM.

A 2022 government survey said the number of affected teenage girls had fallen from 29 percent to nine percent since 1998 nationally.But that does not reflect reality in some areas.

"We don't circumcise girls because the culture has changed," Maasai elder Moses Letuati, 50, told AFP -- before admitting one of his four daughters was cut.

Many of the Maasai men at the meeting said it should end, although one said only because an "uncut woman is better" in bed.

- Cries and curses -

"I was screaming and struggling," said Martha, 18, who was 10 when two women, under pressure from their community, cut her at home in Narok East on her father's say-so.

She later fled to a local shelter run by activist Patrick Ngigi, who says his organisation Mission with a Vision has rescued some 3,000 victims of FGM since 1997.

The shelter, supported by the United Nations Population Fund, has CCTV and panic buttons to protect the girls from fathers and elders who disagree with its mission.

"It's a dangerous job... You make so many enemies, but slowly with time, you get used to it," said Ngigi, who has faced curses by community elders.

The work is endless: at the village meeting, Ngigi was quietly approached by women pleading with him to take six more girls at risk of FGM.

The practise persists among the community thanks to beliefs that a girl should be cut ahead of marriage, and should she not undergo it will face ostracism.

As a result, Ngigi said change requires education, dialogue and an end to corruption.

"When a policeman comes and finds you doing it, you just give him something and you continue," he said.

Police officer Raphael Maroa rejected the accusation of corruption but admitted FGM was entrenched, with many girls now spirited over the nearby Tanzanian border for the procedure.

Ngigi criticised the community's lack of education -- roughly half of Narok's population is illiterate, according to 2022 figures -- but then admitted to AFP that his two daughters had also been cut, to avoid "conflict with my parents".

- 'A monster' -

The Maasai remain among Kenya's poorest communities and have faced decades of land loss due to colonial settlers and now tourism, and some remain suspicious of outsiders trying to change their way of life.

One young Maasai man told AFP he had friends who still believed in FGM, but said girls were no longer cursed -- a form of social control, used by elders -- for refusing it.

Cynthia Taruru would disagree.

Her father cursed her when her college-educated sister rescued her from FGM aged 11.

"I could see myself dying, or not getting children, because I believed my father had just cursed me," said Taruru, now 23.

"I had to pay my father a cow to get the curse lifted," she said.

Local health officials said victims of FGM often suffer fistulas and obstructed labour in childbirth, exacerbated by long distances to health facilities.

Many young women, hoping to protect their families from arrest for allowing FGM, opt for home births, raising the risk of complications and death, although officials said data was lacking on exact numbers.

Nurse Loise Nashipa, 32, at the Entasekera Health Centre, described FGM as "a monster".

"There's bleeding, and there's pain, and infection," she said, saying most cutting was still done by elderly women in unsanitary conditions.

Officially, FGM rates have fallen, said Rhoda Orido, head nurse at Narok County Hospital, "but I think it's because some deliver at home".

- 'He'll forgive me' -

As night fell at Ngigi's shelter, the girls celebrated the graduation of Cecilia Nairuko, 24, who ran away from FGM and forced marriage at the age of 15 and has qualified as a psychologist.

Beaming, she danced around the facility in a graduation gown that has passed from one girl to the next.

But her mood darkened when asked about her family: her father and three of her four brothers have not forgiven her.

She knows there is one path back to her family: "If I can earn enough money, he'll forgive me."

A.Murugan--DT