At least 200 million girls and women in 30 countries are estimated to
have undergone female circumcision — half of them in Egypt, Ethiopia
and Indonesia, the U.N. children’s agency said in a report released
Thursday night.
The UNICEF statistical report said the global
figure includes nearly 70 million more girls and women than it estimated
in 2014. It said this is due to population growth in some countries and
new data from Indonesia.
The U.N. General Assembly unanimously
approved a resolution in December 2012 calling for a global ban on
female genital mutilation, a centuries-old practice stemming from the
belief that circumcising girls controls women’s sexuality and enhances
fertility. One of the targets in the new U.N. goals adopted last
September calls for the practice to be eliminated by 2030.
UNICEF
Deputy Executive Director Geeta Rao Gupta said in a statement coinciding
with the new report that “determining the magnitude of female genital
mutilation is essential to eliminating the practice.”
While
there has been an overall decline in the prevalence of female genital
mutilation over the last three decades, UNICEF said it isn’t enough to
keep up with increasing population growth. If current trends continue,
it warned that the number of girls and women undergoing FGM “will rise
significantly over the next 15 years.”
UNICEF statistical expert Claudia Cappa, lead author of the report,
said the estimate of 200 million circumcisions comes from household
surveys on the prevalence of female genital mutilation, and statistical
modeling.
The 30 countries, mainly in Africa, the Middle East and
Asia, “have large-scale representative data,” she told AP. “We still
think this is a conservative estimate because we know there are many
more countries where the practice exists, but we couldn’t report on it
with the same level of care because we don’t have available data.”
Cappa
said the practice exists in other countries not in the study, where
large-scale data was not available, like India, Malaysia, Oman, Saudia
Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, as well as in pockets in Australia,
North America and Europe where immigrants from countries with a large
number of female circumcisions live.
In
the 30 countries, UNICEF said the majority of girls were circumcised
before reaching their fifth birthdays. “In Yemen, 85 percent of girls
experienced the practice within their first week of life,” the agency
said.
According to the data, girls under the age of 14 represent
an estimated 44 million of those who have been cut, with the highest
prevalence in this age group in Gambia at 56 percent, Mauritania at 54
percent and Indonesia where about half of girls aged 11 or under have
undergone the practice.
Countries with the highest prevalence
among girls and women aged 15 to 49 are Somalia at 98 percent, Guinea at
97 percent and Djibouti at 93 percent, UNICEF said.
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