FGM: A child abuse 'out of the ordinary'

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London is hosting an international summit to discuss putting a stop to female genital mutilation. In the UK as many as 170,000 women and girls have been cut but why does the practice persist and what does it mean for the victims?

"They love their children a lot," Jay Kamara-Frederick says of the parents who have their daughters cut.

"They just want their child to be part of an out-dated, ancient tradition."

As a young teenager Jay, now in her thirties, was taken by her family from the UK back to Sierra Leone.

She was told she was going to join a woman's society and that it would "empower me as a woman".

But it was not until she was an adult that she realised what had been done to her 10 years earlier. And where that memory should have been, she says, there was instead a void.

"They say when people are traumatised that happens to them," Jay says. "That part of me was totally gone."

There are various types of female genital mutilation, or cutting. Among them is the partial or total removal of the clitoris.

Now a marketing consultant and some-time campaigner against the practice, Jay says what happened to her is not a subject easily discussed in her "very traditional" family.

"I really respect my mum's view, to be quiet on the issue," she says, smiling. "But what I love about my mum is that she respects my view to keep talking."

'Loving and caring'

Jay's story is far from unique - the Home Affairs Select Committee has estimated there could be 170,000 victims in the UK alone.

It is is a form of child abuse that is "out of the ordinary", says John Cameron, head of child protection at the NSPCC.

"Speaking out is a real problem," he adds, warning victims within families can "go under the radar".

An NSPCC helpline introduced a year ago has already had almost 300 calls, prompting nearly 130 referrals to the police and children's services.

The following cases were among those calls (identifying details have been removed):

Female genital mutilation

Source: World Health Organization

Mr Cameron says, for some, FGM is still shrouded in mystery.

"I don't think people understand in terms of the anatomical details of what is happening to girls - and the trauma behind that," he says. "It is still underplayed."

He likens the reluctance to talk about FGM to the way smacking was silently accepted for years.

"It's not a case of being able to put in a solution straight away and getting a shift overnight," he says. "It's a very complex issue."

Types of FGM

• Clitoridectomy - partial or total removal of the clitoris

• Excision - removal of the clitoris and inner labia (lips), with or without the outer labia

• Infibulation - cutting, removing and sewing up the genitalia

• Any other type of intentional damage to the female genitalia (burning, scraping et cetera)

Comfort Momoh runs the African Well Women's Clinic at Guy's Hospital in London which treats FGM victims.

"The problem is big in the UK," she admits. The clinic sees between 300 and 350 women every year.

The UK problem includes girls being cut here but also being taken overseas - sometimes in school holidays - to be cut before returning home.

Dr Momoh believes numbers are increasing because of migration and because more people are speaking out and seeking help.

She wants to see FGM become part of the core training curriculum for all health professionals to tackle what she says is a complicated problem.

Sexually obedient

Different reasons are given in different cultures for carrying out FGM - including preserving a girl's virginity and keeping her "clean".

It is a kind of child abuse that has been both "normalised" and mythologised in some cultures, says the NSPCC's John Cameron.

Some of the cultural beliefs around it, that women are better cooks if they have been cut - for example - may seem unbelievable but still persist today.

Kanwal Ahluwalia, gender adviser at children's charity Plan UK, is clear what the practice really means.

"It is about gender discrimination," she says. "It is about controlling women and their roles in society."

Victim Jay says reasons vary from initiating girls "into womanhood" to "keeping women obedient sexually".

Many of the women who take their daughters to be cut "don't see anything wrong with it," Kawal Ahluwalia says. "They're doing what they think is right for their children."

And sometimes laws do not hold much weight in rural communities overseas where FGM is committed, she adds, so legal changes alone will not end the practice.

"There is no silver bullet. There has to be a multi-pronged attack. But we have to make sure it is handled delicately to make sure there is no backlash from the community."

Some women choose to be cut, Jay says, seeing as part of staying true to their cultural background.

But she is clear where she stands: "I would never want anybody to go through what I've been through."