Kenyan woman jailed for six years for circumcising twin daughters

File photo: Independent Media

File photo: Independent Media

Published Nov 23, 2018

Share

NAIROBI - A woman in

central Kenya was jailed for six years for forcing her

13-year-old twin daughters to undergo female genital mutilation

(FGM) in a rare conviction in the east African nation, a charity

which helped rescue the girls said on Friday.

Florence Muthoni from Tharaka-Nithi county was arrested on

Wednesday after a tip-off from the charity Plan International.

She was sentenced by a magistrates court in Chuka on Thursday

after admitting to taking her daughters to a circumciser.

A senior aid worker at the charity said Muthoni told the

court that she wanted her daughters to undergo FGM to avoid a

curse from her deceased grandfather who had instructed all girls

in the family undergo the procedure.

"A community member alerted us when they had heard the

mother was organising the girls to undergo the cut, so we

informed the local authorities," Mercy Chege, a director at Plan

International, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

"Unfortunately, we were not able to prevent the circumcision

as by the time the police conducted the raid and rescued the

girls, they had already been cut."

The twin girls are receiving medical treatment and

counselling while police are still investigating as the mother

had refused to name the circumciser, said Chege.

According to the United Nations, one in five women and girls

aged between 15 and 49 in Kenya have undergone FGM, which

usually involves the partial or total removal of the genitalia.

In some cases, girls can bleed to death or die from

infections. FGM can also cause lifelong conditions such as

fistula as well as fatal childbirth complications.

Kenya outlawed the practice in 2011, but it continues as

communities believe it is necessary for social acceptance and

increasing girls' marriage prospects.

While some arrests have been made and cases brought to

court, campaigners say implementation of the law remains a

challenge, largely due to a lack of resources and capacity of

law enforcement agencies and difficulties reaching remote areas.

U.N. data shows 75 cases of FGM were brought before Kenyan

courts in 2016 but only 10 cases resulted in a conviction.

Campaigners said this week's conviction proved that public

awareness campaigns run by charities were essential to curbing

FGM as they could lead to community members reporting the crime.

"It is very important that FGM laws are properly implemented

as this sends a message out that FGM will not be tolerated,"

said Ann-Marie Wilson, executive director of 28 Too Many.

The U.N. estimates 200 million girls and women worldwide

have undergone FGM. It is practised in about 27 African nations,

parts of Asia and the Middle East - and is usually carried out

by traditional cutters, often with unsterilised knives. 

Thomson Reuters Foundation

Related Topics: