Parents are taking their daughters to remote regions of Kenya to undergo female
genital mutilation (FGM) in secret, according to the head of the
country's new FGM prosecution unit.
Christine Nanjala, who has led a high-profile crackdown on the
practice, said perpetrators were becoming increasingly difficult to catch
as many moved underground to carry out the practice.
"A while back you would have a big ceremony;
there would be food and dancing. You have none of that now because they know we
will detect it," Nanjala said. "Now, the girls are taken deep into
the interior of the country where there are no roads and no mobile signal. They
are taken to mountaintops."
FGM celebrations were sometimes held in churches,
Nanjala said, and nurses or doctors were carrying out the procedure covertly in
hospitals and clinics. "Girls will be admitted to hospital on the pretence
that they are ill – and then FGM will be performed," she said. "The
face of FGM keeps changing. You have to keep pushing and pushing or these
people will not stop."
FGM – the removal of part or all of a girl's
external genitalia – is carried out in some communities in at least 29
countries in Africa. It was banned in Kenya in
2001, and laws were tightened 10 years later to make it illegal to provide
premises for FGM to take place, and to be aware of the crime and not report it.
But resistance to the law remains high, often led by older women.
"We spoke to one community elder about FGM – he went back to his village
to give the message and the old women beat him up and took his cattle,"
Nanjala said.
This year, in Kajiado, 80km south of Nairobi, there
were large demonstrations by Masai women in support of FGM. According to a 2009
public health survey, 73% of Masai women have undergone FGM, while 27% of
Kenya's female population have undergone the practice.
"I am honestly glad
they are demonstrating," Nanjala said. "Now we can get the conversation
going. If they protest it makes the girls among them think and ask
questions."
A Masai couple pleaded not guilty to the murder of 13-year-old Raima Ntagusa in June, who bled to
death after an FGM procedure went wrong. Nanjala said a recent raid had
resulted in the arrests of two parents, a cutter and a village chief.
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