Circumcision deaths unacceptable - HRC

FILE - In this photo taken Saturday, June 30, 2013 A Xhosa boy covered with a blanket and smeared with chalky mud sits in a field as he and others undergo traditional Xhosa male circumcision ceremonies into manhood near the home of former South African president Nelson Mandela in Qunu, South Africa. At least 60 males have died at initiation schools in eastern South Africa since the start of the initiation season in May, health officials confirmed. Thirty of them died in the Eastern Cape in the last six weeks, and 300 others were hospitalized with injuries. (AP Photo/Schalk van Zuydam, File)

FILE - In this photo taken Saturday, June 30, 2013 A Xhosa boy covered with a blanket and smeared with chalky mud sits in a field as he and others undergo traditional Xhosa male circumcision ceremonies into manhood near the home of former South African president Nelson Mandela in Qunu, South Africa. At least 60 males have died at initiation schools in eastern South Africa since the start of the initiation season in May, health officials confirmed. Thirty of them died in the Eastern Cape in the last six weeks, and 300 others were hospitalized with injuries. (AP Photo/Schalk van Zuydam, File)

Published Jul 2, 2014

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Johannesburg - Death as a result of circumcision is unacceptable, the SA Human Rights Commission said after more than 10 deaths linked to the cultural rite were reported so far this winter.

“While as a human rights institution we respect the observance of any culture, we cannot accept and tolerate a culture that leads to the death of children and the youth,” SAHRC spokesman Isaac Mangena said on Wednesday.

“Of all of the guarantees enshrined within our Constitution, the right tolife is the most fundamental.”

The SAHRC called on the presidency and the Commission for the Promotion and Protection of the Rights of Cultural, Religious, and Linguistic Communities (CRL rights commission) to do everything possible to prevent more deaths at circumcision schools.

Mangena said although the CRL rights commission and presidency were addressing the matter, they were concerned following reports on Tuesday that at least 13 initiates had died in the Eastern Cape since the start of the winter initiation season.

“The number is expected to rise as more schools receive initiates with the inland schools in recess,” Mangena said in a statement.

A report compiled by the CRL rights commission stated that 486 people had died due to traditional circumcision processes in the past seven years, said Mangena.

More fatalities were unacceptable.

The SAHRC and the CRL rights commission had held public hearings on initiation schools in 2010 where several recommendations were made on how to make circumcision safer.

Mangena said they now wanted to make more enquiries into the matter.

Sapa

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