Newswire : Gambian women furious over vote to restore female circumcision

Gambian women protest female genital mutilation

Apr. 1, 2024 (GIN) – ‘Over my dead body!’
 
That was how one Gambian woman expressed her frustration with a vote by the country’s majority male legislators to end the prohibition of female genital mutilation (FGM). The practice has been on the rise in recent years despite activist campaigns to outlaw it.
 Lawmaker Almameh Gibba presented the repeal bill earlier this month, arguing the ban violates citizens’ rights to practice their culture and religion. Gambia is an overwhelmingly Muslim country.
 
If the bill is passed, Gambia would become the first country to reverse a ban on FGM.
 
The vote comes just a month after the International Day of Zero Tolerance for FGM, observed annually on Feb. 6. This year it was observed with the theme “Her Voice, Her Future.”
 
Gambian lawmakers have already voted to advance the measure that removes legal protections in effect since 2015 for millions of girls.
Ndeye Rose Sarr, head of the local United Nations Fund for Population Activities, shared some of the historical background: “From the age of 10, girls begin to be looked at as a potential bride for an older man. And if she has not yet undergone FGM, there will be those in her community who will want to make sure that she does.”
 
The rate of FGM in The Gambia is around 76 per cent of women in the 14-to-49-year age range, and about 51 per cent for girls up to the age of 14. “That means that, on average, every other young girl you see in The Gambia has undergone this mutilation,” Sarr said.
 
Globally, over 200 million women and girls are estimated to have undergone some form of genital mutilation and girls aged 14 and younger account for about 44 million of those who have been “cut.”
 
The practice is almost universal in Somalia, Guinea and Djibouti, with levels of 90 per cent or higher, while it affects no more than 1 per cent of girls and women in Cameroon and Uganda.
 
Contrary to popular perception, female genital mutilation is also practiced in the U.S. According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more than half a million women and girls have either undergone or are at risk of undergoing the procedure in the future. Most, but not all, are immigrants to the U.S.
 
The  ban was put in place during the tenure of former Gambian President Yahya Jammeh, whose government opposed the practice.
 
Isatou Keita, writing for the online publication Semafor, had this to say about FGM. “From my perspective as a Gambian woman, banning FGM is highly commendable… As a staunch advocate for human rights and gender equality, I firmly believe that every individual has the right to live free from violence, coercion, and discrimination, including harmful cultural practices like FGM.”
 
“The ban against FGM signifies a step towards empowerment and autonomy, granting us agency over our bodies.”
 
World leaders overwhelmingly back the elimination of female genital mutilation by 2030 as one of the U.N.’s Sustainable Development Goals. The U.N. considers it achievable if nations act now to translate that commitment into action.

Desperate Gambian leader may find all exits now closed

 

gambia

 #GambiaHasDecided sign

       Jan. 16 2017 (GIN) – Gambian President Yahya Jammeh hardened his position this week in defiance of December’s election results that put opposition candidate, Adama Barrow, squarely over the top. Now, as military loyalists peel off or are jailed, it appears he may have played his last card.

For weeks, diplomatic overtures by various pan-African institutions offering a dignified departure were turned down. Offers of asylum from Nigerian MPs were left on the table. The stated wishes of the Gambian people to have a leader of their choice were overruled

Finally, a last ditch effort to stop the inauguration of President-elect Barrow suffered a major setback this week as the country’s Supreme Court refused to hear a petition by Mr. Jammeh’s party.

Emmanuel Fagbenle, the country’s chief judge, denied the petition on the grounds that it listed Fagbenle, who is the only Supreme Court Judge at the moment, as a party in the application, according to the Premium Times of Nigeria. Mr Fabgenle bowed out, saying he could not give an order against himself.

Inauguration ceremonies are scheduled for this week but the unresolved matter of Mr. Jammeh has prompted neighboring countries to prepare for a military action. Nigeria reportedly has readied some 800 troops for a “rapid reaction” military incursion should the call be made for such a response.

Close to a thousand Gambians have already crossed the borders to neighboring countries, telling media outlets they fear chaos and violence by the remaining Jammeh loyalists.

As with other world leaders, Mr. Barrow has set up a Twitter feed called #GambiaHasDecided Also on Twitter, longtime human rights activist Kumi Naidoo of South Africa posted the following message: “Just finished a very inspiring meeting with Gambian civil society representatives and while challenges are huge so is courage & commitment.”

Mr Barrow has found temporary sanctuary in neighboring Senegal at the advice of regional leaders, and will return home only when his inauguration is secured – possibly under the escort of West African troops.

In the midst of the chaos, the president-elect learned to his chagrin that his eight year old son, Habibu, died after he was bitten by a dog near the capital Banjul.

He was unable to return for his son’s funeral, which took place almost immediately, as required by Islamic law. Pictures posted on Twitter showed what appeared to be Habibu’s casket, covered in a black cotton shroud, being carried through a grove by mourners.

Mr Jammeh, who ousted his predecessor Sir Dawda Jawara in a coup in 1994, once vowed to “rule for a billion years with the help of Allah.” Most recently he has shut independent radio stations, arrested activists and sent soldiers to storm the electoral commission.

Declared Malian President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita: “I dare to hope that African wisdom will convince our brother [to] understand the greater good for the Gambia, which does not need a bloodbath.” w/pix of GambiaHasDecided supporters