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Gambia News : Gambian women’s rights group seeks outlawing of FGM
The executive director of the Banjul-based women’s rights group, the
Gambia Committee for the Prevention of Harmful Traditional Practices
(GAMCOTRAP), on Monday disclosed that her organization was sensitizing
the National Assembly members on the ills of Female Genital Mutilation
(FGM) so that it would be outlawed in the Gambia.
Dr
Isatou Touray said, “female genital mutilation is a gross violation of
the sexual and reproductive health rights of women and girls. It
affects the bodily integrity of women. When children are being taken to
circumcision, they are not usually told what is going to happen to
them”.
She continued, “When female genital mutilation is
carried out on a woman, the damage can never be rectified, because it
involves the removal of a very sensitive and essential part of the
female genitalia and the sexuality of the woman”.
Madam Touray said legislation against female genital
mutilation is needed to protect and promote the human rights of women
and children, adding that legislation would deter people from engaging
in the practice.
She added that her organization has been working with
the National Assembly members for the past two years for them to pass a
bill that deals with the practice. She said some of the Gambian
parliamentarians do not know much about FGM, and as a result think that
it is a religious injunction.
“We are creating awareness on the existence of the
International Bill of Rights of Women and all other conventions that
protect the rights of women and children, such as the Convention on the
Elimination of all Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW), the
Convention on the Rights of the Child and the African Protocol on the
Rights of Women,” she remarked.
She added that these sensitization programmes are aimed
at ensuring that when the draft women’s bill is brought before the
Gambia National Assembly, it will not face resistance or unnecessary
reservations.
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- I have a question. Is this done routinely to girls or is it a family decision. I hope that the law passes against this practice.
(Posted on March 12, 2010, 12:28 AM karen mccormack)
- Keep up the good work Dr Isatou Touray .
(Posted on October 17, 2009, 11:16 PM Anita)
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