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NEWS and REPORTS => World News => Topic started by: HuffingtonPost on Feb 06, 2015, 05:31 PM

Title: #News: As Risk Of Female Genital Mutilation More Than Doubles In U.S, Lawmakers Take Action
Post by: HuffingtonPost on Feb 06, 2015, 05:31 PM


By Lisa Anderson                

NEW YORK, Feb 6 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - The number of  women and girls in the United States at risk of female genital  mutilation has more than doubled since 2000 to half a million,  say demographic researchers who expect that figure to rise even  further.                

The report, released on International Day of Zero Tolerance  for Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) on Friday, said the main  cause of the rapid growth was a doubling of immigration to the  United States between 2000 and 2013 from African countries where  the brutal tradition is prevalent.                

"We put out these numbers so decisions can be made by policy  makers in this country," said Charlotte Feldman-Jacobs, an  author of the report and director of the gender program at the  nonprofit Population Reference Bureau (PRB).                

"In order to know where these girls and women are and how  many, this data is critical."                

FGM, which involves the partial or complete removal of the  external genitalia, is considered a necessary pre-marriage  ritual for girls in many countries, but it can cause lasting  physical and psychological damage and even death.                

The practice is most common in Africa and the Middle East,  though most African countries where FGM is found have banned the  practice.                

PRB's findings come at a time of heightened awareness and  concern about FGM in the United States, which banned the  practice in 1996 and passed a law in 2012 making it illegal to  transport a girl out of the United States for the purpose of  FGM.                

On Thursday, U.S. Rep. Joe Crowley of New York and U.S. Rep.  Sheila Jackson Lee of Texas, both Democrats, introduced the Zero  Tolerance for FGM Act of 2015, which would charge the federal  government with drafting and implementing a national strategy to  protect girls in the United States from FGM.                

About 55 percent of the 506,795 women and girls in the  United States at risk of FGM in 2013 were either born in Egypt,  Ethiopia or Somalia, or born to parents from those countries,  the researchers found.                

In those countries, the vast majority of women and girls  between the ages of 15 and 49 undergo FGM: 91 percent in Egypt,  74 percent in Ethiopia, and 98 percent in Somalia.                

Other women and girls in the United States at risk of FGM  were from or had familial ties to Nigeria, Liberia, Sierra  Leone, Sudan, Kenya, Eritrea and Guinea.                

"We applied country prevalence rates to the number of U.S.  women and girls with ties to those countries to estimate risk,"  said Mark Mather, a demographer at PRB who co-authored the  report.                

Overall, about 97 percent of U.S. women and girls at risk of  FGM were from or had ties to African countries, while 3 percent  were from Asia.                

The state with the most women and girls at risk was  California, followed by New York, Minnesota, Texas, Maryland,  New Jersey, Virginia and Washington. Those eight states are home  to about 60 percent of the total number of women and girls at  risk in the country.                

The women and girls at risk typically live in or around  large cities, with about 40 percent of them living in the New  York, Washington, D.C., Minneapolis-St. Paul, Los Angeles and  Seattle metropolitan areas.                

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention plan to issue  a report on FGM in the United States in coming weeks with  conclusions similar to those from PRB.                

"Having a better idea of the magnitude of FGM here will mean  that we have a much stronger argument in terms of changing  policy and allocating resources," said Shelby Quast, policy  director at Equality Now, an NGO dedicated to the protection and  promotion of the human rights of women and girls globally.                

More than 130 million girls and women in Africa and the  Middle East have experienced some form of FGM, according to 2014  data from UNICEF.                

(Reporting by Lisa Anderson, Editing by Alisa Tang.)
Source: huffingtonPost