Burkina arrests 14 for female circumcision

Burkina arrests 14 for female circumcision

OUAGADOUGOU – Police in Burkina Faso have arrested 14 people for carrying out female genital mutilation on girls aged between two and 10 years, a campaign group in the West African country said yesterday.

One of the 16 victims would have bled to death without immediate medical help because her arteries were severed during the procedure, medics said. Adama Barry, who has four previous convictions for practising female circumcision, was arrested with 13 other people after an anonymous tip-off to the National Committee for the Fight against Excision (CNLPE).”This time there will be no leniency.She and her accomplices should get the maximum sanction so that we’re sure such acts won’t happen again,” Hortense Palm, a senior CNLPE official, told Reuters.The procedure, which involves cutting the clitoris and other genitalia, is seen in some cultures as a rite of passage from girlhood to womanhood and a way of preventing promiscuity.It is sometimes carried out by a doctor, but often in rural societies by a relative or traditional healer.”There was a haemorrhage in one case because arteries had been severed,” said doctor Michel Akotionga, who examined the girls after they were brought to his clinic in Ouagadougou.”If this little girl had been left at home, she would certainly have died.”- Nampa-ReutersAdama Barry, who has four previous convictions for practising female circumcision, was arrested with 13 other people after an anonymous tip-off to the National Committee for the Fight against Excision (CNLPE).”This time there will be no leniency.She and her accomplices should get the maximum sanction so that we’re sure such acts won’t happen again,” Hortense Palm, a senior CNLPE official, told Reuters.The procedure, which involves cutting the clitoris and other genitalia, is seen in some cultures as a rite of passage from girlhood to womanhood and a way of preventing promiscuity.It is sometimes carried out by a doctor, but often in rural societies by a relative or traditional healer.”There was a haemorrhage in one case because arteries had been severed,” said doctor Michel Akotionga, who examined the girls after they were brought to his clinic in Ouagadougou.”If this little girl had been left at home, she would certainly have died.”- Nampa-Reuters

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