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Monday, 23 June, 2003, 18:42 GMT 19:42 UK

Female genital mutilation 'must end'

By Heba Saleh
BBC correspondent in Cairo

Woman who performs female circumcision (generic)

Participants from 28 African and Arab countries have ended a high-profile conference on female genital mutilation with a call for more efforts to get the practice banned.

The assembled government and NGO representatives in the Egyptian capital, Cairo, said that where it is politically feasible, female circumcision should be prohibited by law.

Some two million girls, mainly in Africa and parts of the Arab world, undergo the procedure every year.

And in Egypt, despite a government ban since 1997, female genital mutilation remains extremely widespread.

Changing attitudes

The Cairo declaration on female genital mutilation calls on governments to adopt legislation against the practice.

" In many societies circumcision is thought to be a religious requirement in order to keep girls chaste "

It stops short, however, of asking for an immediate ban on female circumcision wherever it is practised.

The careful wording is a measure of the difficulties in combating a custom so deeply rooted in many societies.

The declaration says the practice should be prohibited by law wherever this is politically feasible, but it urges government in civil society to work together to change attitudes to women in order to eradicate circumcision.

More than 120 million women in Africa and the Arab world have undergone the procedure, in which parts of the female genital organs are removed.

'No justification'

In many societies, circumcision is thought to be a religious requirement in order to keep girls chaste.

The Cairo conference, however, was addressed by the two most senior Muslim and Christian religious leaders in Egypt.

Both said that female circumcision has no justification in religion.

This is a message which Egyptian women's associations have been trying to spread for decades.

A few years ago the government came on board and prohibited the practice, but the ban has proved weaker than the age-old tradition.

Female genital mutilation remains widespread.

And most Egyptian mothers still say they want their daughters to be circumcised.


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Related to this story:
Genital mutilation 'still common' (10 Jun 03  |  Africa )
Reversing female circumcision (08 Feb 03  |  Health )
Kenyan girls flee mutilation (07 Feb 03  |  Africa )
'Zero tolerance' for genital mutilation (06 Feb 03  |  Africa )
Cameroon princess fights mutilation (09 Dec 02  |  Africa )
Ethiopian girl recounts night of terror (30 Apr 02  |  Africa )
Changing attitudes to female circumcision (08 Apr 02  |  Health )

RELATED INTERNET LINKS:
Female Genital Mutilation information
Egyptian State Information Service
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