Historisk arkiv

End Female Genital Mutilation!

Historisk arkiv

Publisert under: Regjeringen Solberg

Utgiver: Utenriksdepartementet

- UNFPA and Norway stand together to encourage all communities to consign female genital mutilation to history, to free girls from its damaging effects, and to contribute to the realization of girls' and women's potential everywhere, skriver utenriksminister Børge Brende og dr. Babatunde Osotimehin fra FNs befolkninsgfond i denne kronikken (Huffington Post 8. februar) i anledning verdens dag mot kjønnslemlestelse.

Today, on the International Day of Zero Tolerance for Female Genital Mutilation, the genitals of 8,000 girls will be mutilated, most at the behest of their parents and communities as a rite of passage from girlhood to womanhood. But for the nearly 3 million girls who are subjected to this practice each year, it is also a passage to a lifetime of pain, health problems and human rights violations. And, in some cases, a passage to death.

The practice is widespread in parts of sub-Saharan Africa, the Middle East, Asia and Latin America. But it also occurs in developed countries like Norway, where the government and civil society organizations from the diaspora communities affected by this practice have long been working together against it and are achieving results.

In 2015, the international community committed to eliminating female genital mutilation everywhere. One of the targets of the newly adopted Sustainable Development Goals is to end this harmful practice against women and girls by 2030.

Protecting girls from genital mutilation is critical to their safe and healthy transition from adolescence to adulthood and to the realization of their full potential in life. It also empowers them to propel their nations' progress and development.

Since 2007, Norway has supported a joint effort by UNFPA, the United Nations Population Fund, and UNICEF to encourage communities to abandon female genital mutilation. This effort is based on the understanding that traditions, customs and behaviours can change over time, but for this change to be meaningful and lasting, it must come from within communities that collectively decide to abandon the practice. It is also based on the reality that parents everywhere want to do what is best for their children.

For families to be willing to challenge their long-held beliefs and traditions, they must trust that the new information they receive will benefit them and their communities, improve their lives and be widely accepted by those around them. When parents develop a real understanding of the health risks associated with female genital mutilation and the negative impact the practice has on girls' lives, they are more willing to abandon the practice, which in some parts of the world has gone on for centuries.

UNFPA works with communities in dozens of countries to raise parents' and girls' awareness of the consequences of female genital mutilation and the benefits of protecting girls from this harmful practice. It does so in partnership with many national and local organizations, as well as countries, including Norway. As a result of this effort, 15,490 communities have decided to abandon female genital mutilation and have celebrated their decisions through public, collective declarations. In places where female genital mutilation had occurred for generations as an essential rite of passage, such declarations also serve to assure girls that their future acceptance and respect by their communities will no longer depend on whether they have endured this practice.

In ending female genital mutilation, parents and communities are not only sparing girls the immediate pain and trauma but are also protecting their human rights.

The practice has been outlawed in most countries, but this unfortunately does not mean it no longer exists. Whether in Norway or in sub-Saharan Africa, a sustained and concerted effort to raise awareness about its harmful effects and about the benefits of not subjecting girls to this practice can lead to its demise. To achieve this, continuous community engagement is essential. UNFPA and Norway stand together to encourage all communities to consign female genital mutilation to history, to free girls from its damaging effects, and to contribute to the realization of girls' and women's potential everywhere. The world needs their power if it is to fulfil its sustainable development promise.

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Babatunde Osotimehin er eksekutivdirektør i FNs befolkningsfond (UNFPA)