
Osun
and Ekiti have been identified as the leading states in Nigeria in the
practice of female genital mutilation and cutting (FGMC), experts have
stated.
The experts, at a sensitisation programme in Ado Ekiti,
the Ekiti State capital at the weekend, also announced that no fewer
than 120 million females are carrying the negative effects of the act
across the globe, saying it had no known benefit to the victims. At a
sensitisation and “Edutainment” programme held at the Ekiti State
University (EKSU), Ado Ekiti, the experts lamented that over 71 per cent
cases are reported in Ekiti, ranking the state second only to Osun in
the prevalence of the harmful practice. They charged the crowd of
young people at the programme to go out and join in the campaign against
the act, pointing out that FGM had done more harm to women that had
been cut.
The experts at the programme by The New Generation
Girls and Women Development Initiative (NIGAWD) and funded by the United
Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), disclosed that many of the 120million
victims are either carrying lifetime infectious diseases like HIV, had
suffered barrenness, hemorrhage, broken home due to s3xual
non-satisfaction and other associated problems due to the cutting of
their genitals. Executive Director of NIGAWD, Abimbola Aladejare and
Director, Centre for Gender Development, Ekiti State University (EKSU),
Ado Ekiti, Professor Kemi Ogundana, said the programme was meant to
mobilise the younger generation against the practice and charged that
the end to the practice should be now.
Prof Ogundana described
genital mutilation as “a flagrant infringement of the rights of the
female gender,” and urged the government at all levels to stop the
menace in the overall interest of motherhood. At the programme
tagged: “Join Me to stop Female Genital Mutilation”, the state
Commissioner for Information, Youth and Sports, Mr Lane Ogunsuyi,
explained that the state had domesticated the law banning the practice
in Ekiti and warned that anyone caught still engaging in the practice
would be prosecuted.
Ogunsuyi lamented that Ekiti was second
highest only to Osun State in the act and charged the womenfolk, whom he
described as “the real victims” to intensify their campaign against
cutting of the female genitals, to create more awareness. The
Permanent Secretaries in the state’s Ministries of Health and Women
Affairs, Dr Ayotunde Omole and Mrs Peju Babafemi, respectively and a
prominent Nollywood actor, Miss Juliana Olayode (aka Toyo Baby of
Jenifa’s Diary fame), all joined in the campaign to sensitise against
the scourge.
The experts said “cultural and traditional beliefs
are responsible for the devilish practice and some people see it as a
family heritage, but we must stop it. Some of those who perform the
genital cutting are unskilled. They do it with primitive and
unsterilised equipment and do damage to human parts.
“The World
Health Organisation had a law prohibiting this practice and it has been
domesticated in Nigeria, particularly in Ekiti State. I want to appeal
that the laws must be implemented to protect the lives of our women,” he
said. Aladejare said as a survivor of the practice that she could
not forget the psychological imbalance she always suffered each time she
remembered the level of dehumanization being experienced by the
victims. She said those who practised the act were hiding under the
myth that retention of the female clitoris can cause promiscuity and
stillbirth, which she said had been proven wrong by medical experts.
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