Tanzania – Call for Enforcement of Law Against FGM
Author: Womens UN Report Network
Date: April 23, 2006
Rights
Child
Children
Equality Now Update:
Women’s Action 20.2
April 2006
Tanzania: Enforcement of the Law Against Female
Genital Mutilation
Female genital mutilation (FGM) has been prohibited by law
in Tanzania since 1998, but the law has not been effectively enforced. In
June 2001, Equality Now issued a Women’s Action urging the government of
Tanzania to take more effective action to end the practice of FGM, through
education and enforcement of the law. The Women’s Action highlighted the
case of three girls aged 13 and 14 who fled to a local church for protection
against FGM. Instead of assisting Pastor Zakayo of the church, who brought
the girls to the police, the police arrested the pastor, severely beating him in
an effort to force a confession from him that he had raped the girls. A
hospital examination proved the girls had not been raped, but the police handed
them back to their father, who had them subjected to FGM the next day and
married within a month, one of them as a third wife. No disciplinary
action was ever brought against the policemen involved, and a private
prosecution of the father initiated by Pastor Zakayo was unsuccessful.
Following the trial and publicity around the case, the husband of one of the
girls has sent her back to her father for fear of getting prosecuted himself for
involvement in her mutilation.
Equality Now has been calling for the issuance of formal
instructions to the Tanzanian police nationwide to enforce the law against FGM
and protect the girls from its violation. The Tanzanian government has
received boxfuls of letters to this effect from members of Equality Now’s
Women’s Action Network. Non-governmental organizations (NGOs) working
locally in Tanzania have been engaged in awareness-raising campaigns about FGM
and have also been training the police on the law against FGM. The police
have apparently received instructions through their commanding stations that the
law against FGM should be upheld, although Equality Now has not been able to
obtain a copy of this circular. Local NGOs do, however, believe that the
message is getting out to the practicing population. While there is some
information to suggest that FGM is now being carried out on babies rather than
adolescents to more easily avoid detection, some members of communities who once
supported the practice are now assisting NGOs in monitoring for FGM.
Pastor Zakayo, once vilified by his own community for his work against FGM, says
he has now gained some local respect and that even the father mentioned above,
who forcibly had his three daughters cut after their unsuccessful attempt to
escape, supports his campaign. The police now also collaborate with Pastor
Zakayo, although much education still needs to be done about the law and some
police officers are still reluctant to intervene in what many still regard a
cultural practice.
There are very remote regions that remain difficult to
access both for the police and NGOs working against FGM. It also remains
difficult to get cooperation from the police when FGM has already
occurred. In these cases, there is often inadequate investigation and poor
follow-through in the courts. Even in cases where perpetrators or parents
are arrested for having performed FGM, in many instances they are released or
acquitted without explanation. Where there is police intervention, however, this
appears to have had a positive effect. In July 2004, Pastor Zakayo
received information that a man had taken his children out of school in order to
have them subjected to FGM. When he told the police, they went to the
village to stop the ceremony, making sure to speak to the head teacher, the
village leader and the community which was to participate. A policeman
then went with anti-FGM campaigners to convince the parents to abandon the
practice. As a result of this intervention, the three girls were spared
from genital mutilation and remain uncut. Similarly, in November 2004, a
family member informed Pastor Zakayo that 6-year old Rose, 5-year old Teresa and
4 year-old Naomi were to undergo FGM. The pastor reported this information
to the police who went to speak to the girls’ father. The police informed
the father that FGM is illegal in Tanzania and would be criminally
prosecuted. They also told him they would check regularly to ensure that
the girls had not undergone FGM. To date, the girls have not been
cut.
FGM takes different forms in different countries: the partial
or total removal of the clitoris (clitoridectomy), the removal of the entire
clitoris and the cutting of the labia minora (excision), or in its most extreme
form the removal of all external genitalia and the stitching together of the two
sides of the vulva, leaving only a very small vaginal opening
(infibulation). It is estimated that more than 130 million girls and women
around the world have undergone genital mutilation. At least 2 million
girls every year, 6,000 every day, are at risk of suffering FGM. The
cutting, which is generally done without anaesthetic, may have lifelong health
consequences including chronic infection, severe pain during urination,
menstruation, sexual intercourse, and childbirth, and psychological
trauma. Some girls die from the cutting, usually as a result of bleeding
or infection. An extreme form of the many traditional practices used
around the world to deny women independence and equality, FGM is defended by
both men and women in the cultures where it is practiced as a rite of passage
and a social prerequisite of marriage. It is used to control women’s
sexuality by safeguarding virginity and suppressing sexual desire.
Apart from prohibiting FGM under the Sexual Offences Special
Provisions Act, Tanzania is party to various international human rights treaties
that mandate the protection of girls from the practice of FGM including the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, the International Covenant
on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, the Convention on the Elimination of
All Forms of Discrimination Against Women, the Convention on the Rights of the
Child, and the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights.
Recommended
Actions
Please write to the authorities listed below.
Congratulate them on the efforts made to train police on the law against FGM and
the measures already taken to ensure the police carry out the law. Note
that the timely intervention of the police in some cases has saved girls from
the harmful practice of FGM. Urge the government to continue its efforts
to end the practice of FGM through education as well as enforcement of the law
and to bring disciplinary action against police officers and court officials who
fail to implement the law appropriately. Letters should be addressed
to:
Mr. Omar Mahita
Inspector General of Police
PO Box
9492
Dar-es-Salaam, TANZANIA
Fax: +255-22-213-6556
Honorable Mary Nagu
Minister of Justice and
Constitutional Affairs
PO Box 9050
Dar-es-Salaam, TANZANIA
Fax:
+255-22-211-3236
Please send copies of letters with a request for support
to:
Honorable Sophia Simba
Minister of Community Development,
Gender and Children’s Affairs
PO Box 3448
Dar-es-Salaam, TANZANIA
Fax:
+255-22-213-3647
Please keep Equality Now updated on your efforts and send
copies of any replies you receive to:
Equality Now P.O. Box 20646, Columbus Circle Station, New York NY 10023, USA Equality Now Africa Regional Office, P.O. Box 2018, KNH 00202, Nairobi, KENYA Equality Now P.O. Box 48822, London WC2N 6ZW, UNITED KINGDOM info@equalitynow.org |
================================================================
To
leave the list, send your request by email to:
wunrn_listserve-request@lists.wunrn.com. Thank you.
Categories: Releases